320-8 Environmental Factors Relating to Landscape Variation in Soil Carbon Fractions in Florida, USA.

See more from this Division: S05 Pedology
See more from this Session: Digital Soil Assessment for Ecosystem Modeling: II
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level

David Myers1, Sabine Grunwald1, Nicholas Comerford2 and Willie Harris1, (1)University of Florida, Soil and Water Science Department, Gainesville, FL
(2)University of Florida, Quincy, FL
Carbon (C) is a spatially and chemically dynamic component in the soil landscape. Environmental information correlated to soil C can help explain the dynamic processes controlling the spatial variability of C fractions. Geospatial models that quantify total soil C and chemical C fractions are needed to elucidate on processes and dynamics of the C cycle. We developed geospatial models of soil C fractions as a function of environmental variables for a large region in the southeastern U.S. (Florida). A regional dataset was collected with 1014 site observations from the top 20 cm of Florida soils (~150,000 km2). Measurements included total C (TC), inorganic C (IC), soil organic C (SOC), hot-water extractable C (HC), and recalcitrant C (RC). A database of environmental covariates such as digital elevation models, satellite imagery, soil map-units and map-unit attributes, land cover/land use, canopy density, and biomass were collected in a geographic information system. Several data mining approaches were tested and compared for modeling of soil C fractions across the whole State using calibration/validation split. We examine the performance of individual covariates to model C fractions. This research provides estimates of TC and several C fractions across a large subtropical region composed of diverse soil-hydrology and land uses.