Record Details

Performance of frequently used interpolation methods to predict spatial distribution of selected soil properties in an agricultural watershed in Ethiopia

MELSpace

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title Performance of frequently used interpolation methods to predict spatial distribution of selected soil properties in an agricultural watershed in Ethiopia
 
Creator Addis, Hailu Kendie
 
Contributor Klik, Andreas
Strohmeier, Stefan
 
Subject agricultural watershed
interpolation
radial basis functions
semivariogram.
 
Description Soil maps of an agricultural watershed provide a wealth of knowledge and can be
a vital tool for implementing site specific soil managements. Hence, watershed based soil
assessment was conducted to select an optimum spatial interpolation method, while aiming for
sustainable soil managements. Thus, intensive soil sampling was undertaken to investigate the
performance of ordinary kriging (OK), inverse distance weighting (IDW) and radial basis
functions (RBF) for predicting the spatial distribution of soil texture, pH, soil organic carbon
(SOC) and available phosphorus (AP). The 72ha study area was divided into a 100m by 100m
grids and approximately at the center of each grid, topsoil (10-15cm) samples were collected over
75 locations across the entire study area. The exponential and Gaussian models were best fitted
in the semivariogram of the measured soil variables. The performance of each interpolation
method was assessed quantitatively in terms of Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (E), coefficient of
determination (R2) and index of agreement (d). The interpolated maps generated based on the
highest value of E displayed OK was best performed for SOC and sand. RBF was most suitable
for mapping of AP and clay, while IDW gave better result when applied to pH. The highest value
of R2, E and d (0.51, 0.51, and 0.83, respectively) resulted from the spatial interpolation of AP.
Generally, the methodology used in this study was adequate for spatial interpolation and
evaluation of measured soil properties and can serve as a general method for surface map generation in future studies of similar regions.
 
Date 2016-12-31
2017-02-13T00:42:31Z
2017-02-13T00:42:31Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier https://elibrary.asabe.org/abstract.asp?aid=47441&t=2&redir=&redirType=
https://mel.cgiar.org/reporting/download/hash/EidjDTFP
Hailu Kendie Addis, Andreas Klik, Stefan Strohmeier. (31/12/2016). Performance of frequently used interpolation methods to predict spatial distribution of selected soil properties in an agricultural watershed in Ethiopia. Applied Engineering in Agriculture, 32 (5), pp. 617-626.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11766/5732
Open access
 
Language en
 
Rights CC-BY-NC-4.0
 
Format PDF
 
Publisher American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers
 
Source Applied Engineering in Agriculture;32,(2016) Pagination 617,626