Abstract

ABSTRACT Although regional soil mapping is commended, site-specific studies are required for mapping and quantifying soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks at a landscape scale for management and rehabilitation purposes. Site-specific studies are especially important in remote mountainous areas where soil data are largely absent. The aim of this study was to quantify and map the SOCs of an alpine region in the Maloti-Drakensberg. The samples collected in-field along with digital soil mapping techniques were used to map the SOCs. The models were SoLIM’s rule based (RB) and sample based (SB), random forest (RF), least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO), regression kriging with cubist (RK-CB) and universal kriging. From the results, the mean SOC for the validation dataset of the study area was 12.44 kg organic carbon (OC) m−2. The best model was RK-CB (mean = 12.43 kg OC m−2), with R 2 and root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.61 and 4.01 kg OC m−2, respectively. The underperforming model was SoLIM-RB (mean = 13.27 kg OC m−2), with R 2 = 0.27 and RMSE = 5.75 kg OC m−2. The RK-CB model from this study significantly outperformed a region-scaled model, proving that site-specific studies in small catchments should be preferred to, especially if there are no soil data available for that area.

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