4.7 Article

Land suitability assessment for rapeseed potential cultivation in upper Tigris basin of Turkiye comparing fuzzy and boolean logic

Journal

INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume 208, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2023.117806

Keywords

Artificial intelligence; Multiple-criteria decision analysis; Sustainable agriculture; Land use type

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This study assessed land suitability for rapeseed production using topography, climate, and soil data by analytical hierarchy process (AHP) and the Mamdani Fuzzy Inference System (MFIS). The study area covered land in the Diyarbakir province of southeastern Turkiye. The results indicated the proportions of different land suitability classes and showed the compatibility of AHP and MFIS methods in assessing suitability.
Assessment of land suitability is a prerequisite for the conservation and maintenance of land productivity and the improvement of land use and management systems. This study assessed land suitability for rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) production using topography, climate, and soil data by analytical hierarchy process (AHP) and the Mamdani Fuzzy Inference System (MFIS). The study area covers 3737 km2 of land in the Diyarbakir province of southeastern Turkiye. The weights of topography, soil and climate factors in AHP were determined by expert opinions and the information in related literature. They were included in the whole process, mainly membership functions and rule base stages in the MFIS. The highest weighted factor was slope (0.264), followed by altitude (0.121), annual average temperature (0.114) and soil texture (0.112). The MFIS-based land suitability assessment indicated that the proportions of moderately (S2), marginally (S3) and currently not suitable (N1) land classes in the study area were 71.35%, 18.75% and 9.9%, respectively. The AHP results showed that 98.94% of the land was S3, and 1.06% was N1. The compatibility of AHP and MFIS methods in N1 land units was 96.05%, while the agreement for S2 and S3 land classes was not sufficiently high. The suitability of rapeseed cultivation has been more sensitively assessed by the fuzzy continuous classification obtained by the MFIS method.

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