Abstrakt: |
Spatial variability of soils is a landscape attribute which soil scientists must identify and understand if they are to construct useful soils maps. This paper describes the spatial variability of soils in a forested watershed in the Medicine Bow Mountains, Wyoming, using both conventional statistics and geostatistics. Principle Components Analysis indicated that flow accumulation and aspect were the two terrain attributes that most economically described terrain variability. Thickness of A and B horizons, organic carbon and solum coarse fragments were variable in the study area (CVs of 40 to 58%). Simple correlation and regression analyses suggested there were no statistically significant relationships between soil properties (texture, pH, coarse fragments, organic carbon content) and terrain attributes (elevation, slope gradient, slope shape, flow accumulation, aspect). Geostatistical analysis indicated thickness and coarse fragment contents of the A and B horizons, and solum thickness were spatially independent variables; however, pH, organic carbon content, and solum coarse fragment content were spatially correlated. Spatial variability was described by both linear (pH and organic carbon content) and spherical (solum coarse fragment) models. Use of geostatistics provided insight into the nature of variability in soil properties across the landscape of the Libby Creek watershed when conventional statistics (analysis of variance and regression analysis) did not. Key words:Rocky Mountains, Medicine Bow Mountains, forest soils, spatial variability, principle component analysis, geostatistics |