4.2 Article

Digital mapping of a soil drainage index for irrigated enterprise suitability in Tasmania, Australia

Journal

SOIL RESEARCH
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 107-119

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/SR13100

Keywords

decision trees; digital soil mapping; land suitability; regression trees; random forests; soil drainage; spatial modelling

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council

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An operational Digital Soil Assessment was developed to inform land suitability modelling in newly commissioned irrigation schemes in Tasmania, Australia. The Land Suitability model uses various soil parameters, along with other climate and terrain surfaces, to identify suitable areas for various agricultural enterprises for a combined 70 000-ha pilot project area in the Meander and Midlands Regions of Tasmania. An integral consideration for irrigable suitability is soil drainage. Quantitative measurement and mapping can be resource-intensive in time and associated costs, whereas more 'traditional' mapping approaches can be generalised, lacking the detail required for statistically validated products. The project was not sufficiently resourced to undertake replicated field-drainage measurements and relied on expert field drainage estimates at similar to 930 sites (260 of these for independent validation) to spatially predict soil drainage for both areas using various terrain-based and remotely sensed covariates, using three approaches: (a) decision tree spatial modelling of discrete drainage classes; (b) regression-tree spatial modelling of a continuous drainage index; (c) regression kriging (random-forests with residual-kriging) spatial modelling of a continuous drainage index. Method b was chosen as the best approach in terms of interpretation, and model training and validation, with a concordance coefficient of 0.86 and 0.57, respectively. A classified soil drainage map produced from the 'index' showed good agreement, with a linearly weighted kappa coefficient of 0.72 for training, and 0.37 for validation. The index mapping was incorporated into the overall land suitability model and proved an important consideration for the suitability of most enterprises.

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