AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates soil chemical properties (SCPs) and their fertility in the Yan'an urban forest, an area where such research is less common compared to farmland studies in the Loess Plateau of China.
  • The research compares two spatial interpolation methods, Ordinary Kriging (OK) and Regression Kriging (RK), concluding that RK is better for most nutrient assessments because it factors in terrain influences.
  • Relationships between vegetation cover, terrain, and soil depth show that as soil layer depth increases, overall soil fertility decreases, with specific vegetation types exhibiting significant differences in nutrient content.

Article Abstract

Although the spatial mapping and fertility assessment of soil chemical properties (SCPs) are well studied in the Loess Plateau region of China at farmland scale, little is known about spatial mapping the SCPs and their fertility and their influence factors at urban forest scale. The objectives of this study were to (1) compare the performance of two spatial interpolation methods, Ordinary kriging (OK) and regression kriging (RK), and (2) explain the relationships of the vegetation, terrain, and soil layer depth between the eight SCPs and their fertility, and (3) find the limiting factors of soil comprehensive fertility in this study area? The Yan'an urban forest was taken as study case, used hybrid spatial interpolation methods based on OK and RK to mapping eight SCPs and the soil fertility in each soil layer (0-20 cm, 20-40 cm, and 40-60 cm) for 285 soil samples. The results indicated that RK outperformed OK for total nitrogen (TN), available potassium (AK), organic matter (OM) in 0-60 cm profile and available phosphorus (AP) in the 0-20 cm and 40-60 cm soil layers because RK considered the impact of terrain. The terrain factors, comprising the relative terrain position, slope, aspect, and relative elevation significantly affected the SCPs and spatial heterogeneity of fertility, where the vegetation cover types determined the average SCPs to some extent. On average, the six SCPs (except total potassium and AP) and the fertility decreased as the soil layer depth increased. Ten vegetation cover types comprising broadleaved mixed natural forest (BM), cultivated land (CL), economic forest (EF), grassland (GL), Platycladus orientalis natural forest (PON), Platycladus orientalis plantation (POP), Pinus tabuliformis plantation (PT), Quercus wutaishanica natural forest (QW), Robinia pseudoacacia plantation (RP), and Shrubwood (SW) were associated with significant differences in TN, OM, AN, AP, and AK, across the three soil layers. QW, PON, and BM also had higher content of TN, OM, AN, and AK contents than the other vegetation cover types. There were small differences in TK, AK, and pH among the 10 vegetation cover types. We concluded that AN, TN, and OM are the limiting factors of soil comprehensive fertility in this region. These results improve understanding of the spatial mapping, influence and limiting factors of SCPs and their fertility at urban forest scales.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6193655PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0205661PLOS

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