4.7 Article

Soil texture prediction in tropical soils: A portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry approach

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 362, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2019.114136

Keywords

Proximal sensors; Soil particle size; Prediction models; Brazilian soils

Categories

Funding

  1. Brazilian Coordination for Improvement of Higher Level Personnel (CAPES)
  2. Brazilian Council of Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  3. Minas Gerais State Research Support Foundation (FAPEMIG)

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Soil texture is an important feature in soil characterization, although its laboratory determination is costly and time-consuming. As an alternative, this study aimed at predicting soil texture from portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) spectrometry data in Brazilian soils. 1565 soil samples (503 from superficial and 1062 from sub-superficial horizons) were analyzed in the laboratory for soil texture and scanned with the pXRF. Elemental contents determined by pXRF were correlated with soil texture and used to calibrate regression models through the generalized linear model (GLM), support vector machine (SVM), and random forest (RF) algorithm. Models were created with 70% of the data using three datasets: i) only superficial horizon data; ii) only subsuperficial horizon data; and iii) data from both horizons. Validation was performed with 30% of the data. Clay content was positively correlated with Fe (0.79) and Al2O3 (0.41) reflecting the great residual concentration of Fe- and Al-oxides in this fraction. This same fraction correlated negatively with SiO2 (-0.75), while the sand fraction correlated positively with SiO2 corresponding to quartz dominance in the sand fraction of Brazilian soils. For the separated superficial and subsuperficial horizon datasets, SVM promoted the best predictions of clay (R-2 0.83; RMSE = 7.04%) and sand contents (R-2 0.87; RMSE = 9.11%), while RF provided the best results for silt (R-2 0.60; RMSE = 6.33%). When combining both datasets, RF was better for sand prediction (R-2 0.73; RMSE = 5.79%), while SVM promoted better predictions for silt (R-2 0.72; RMSE = 5.77%) and clay (R-2 0.84; RMSE = 7.08%). Elemental contents obtained by pXRF are capable of accurately predicting soil texture for a great variety of Brazilian soils.

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