4.2 Article

Topographic influence on the variability of soil properties within an undulating Manitoba landscape

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 81, Issue 3, Pages 439-447

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.4141/S00-057

Keywords

soil-landscape; solum thickness; depth to carbonates; organic carbon; soil pH

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As soil properties influence productivity, it is of interest to characterize their distribution for the purpose of intensified agricultural management in variable landscapes. Soil proper-ties (soil organic C content, soil pH, A horizon thickness, solum thickness and depth to carbonates) were studied in 10 intensively sampled transects in a gently undulating glacial till landscape near Miniota, Manitoba. Using a landform. description model, the study site was delineated into upper, mid and lower elevation landform. element complexes (LEC) The program used a digital elevation model created from relative elevation data collected on a 10-m grid. Sample points were also stratified by soil series; Newdale (Orthic Black Chernozem), Varcoe (Gleyed Rego Black Chernozem) and Angusville (Gleyed Eluviated Black Chernozem) soils of the Newdale association were identified. Landform element complexes were ranked lower > mid > upper with respect to convergent landscape character. The eluviated Angusville profiles occurred under more convergent landscape character than the Newdale or Varcoe series. There was a consistent rank of lower > mid > upper with respect to depth to carbonates, A horizon thickness, solum thickness and soil organic C content. Relative ranking of the pH in the Ap horizon was the opposite. In all cases, the lower LEC emerged as most clearly distinct. There was substantial variability in soil profile development, and, therefore, soil series membership, within individual LEC. This indicated that the scale at which LEC are delineated is broader than that at which soil series variability occurs. Nonetheless, LEC were useful in capturing gross variability in soil properties within the landscape at a scale that would allow unique agricultural management practices.

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