Abstract

Abstract. Spatial 3-D information on soil hydraulic properties for areas larger than plot scale is usually derived using indirect methods such as pedotransfer functions (PTFs) due to the lack of measured information on them. PTFs describe the relationship between the desired soil hydraulic parameter and easily available soil properties based on a soil hydraulic reference dataset. Soil hydraulic properties of a catchment or region can be calculated by applying PTFs on available soil maps. Our aim was to analyse the performance of (i) indirect (using PTFs) and (ii) direct (geostatistical) mapping methods to derive 3-D soil hydraulic properties. The study was performed on the Balaton catchment area in Hungary, where density of measured soil hydraulic data fulfils the requirements of geostatistical methods. Maps of saturated water content (0 cm matric potential), field capacity (−330 cm matric potential) and wilting point (−15 000 cm matric potential) for 0–30, 30–60 and 60–90 cm soil depth were prepared. PTFs were derived using the random forest method on the whole Hungarian soil hydraulic dataset, which includes soil chemical, physical, taxonomical and hydraulic properties of some 12 000 samples complemented with information on topography, climate, parent material, vegetation and land use. As a direct and thus geostatistical method, random forest combined with kriging (RFK) was applied to 359 soil profiles located in the Balaton catchment area. There were no significant differences between the direct and indirect methods in six out of nine maps having root-mean-square-error values between 0.052 and 0.074 cm3 cm−3, which is in accordance with the internationally accepted performance of hydraulic PTFs. The PTF-based mapping method performed significantly better than the RFK for the saturated water content at 30–60 and 60–90 cm soil depth; in the case of wilting point the RFK outperformed the PTFs at 60–90 cm depth. Differences between the PTF-based and RFK mapped values are less than 0.025 cm3 cm−3 for 65 %–86 % of the catchment. In RFK, the uncertainty of input environmental covariate layers is less influential on the mapped values, which is preferable. In the PTF-based method the uncertainty of mapping soil hydraulic properties is less computationally intensive. Detailed comparisons of maps derived from the PTF-based method and the RFK are presented in this paper.

Highlights

  • Providing information on soil hydraulic properties is desired for many environmental modelling studies (Van Looy et al, 2017)

  • The study was performed on the Balaton catchment area in Hungary, where density of measured soil hydraulic data fulfils the requirements of geostatistical methods

  • During the parameter tuning of random forest (RF) and generalized boosted regression model (GBM) we found that decreasing the number of input variables – from 173 to 69–76 and from 170 to 65–77 in the case of topsoil and subsoil predictions respectively – significantly improved the prediction of top- and subsoil field capacity (FC) and subsoil wilting point (WP)

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Summary

Introduction

Providing information on soil hydraulic properties is desired for many environmental modelling studies (Van Looy et al, 2017). Most often, measured information on soil water retention or hydraulic conductivity is not available for environmental modelling either at the regional or continental scale. Analyses on the prediction of soil hydraulic properties were started extensively in the 1980s (Ahuja et al, 1985; Pachepsky et al, 1982; Rawls and Brakensiek, 1982; Saxton et al, 1986; Vereecken et al, 1989) and are continuously updated to increase the performance of predictions (pedotransfer functions – PTFs) when newer statistical methods and/or new data become available. B. Szabó et al.: Mapping soil hydraulic properties ers McNeill et al (2018), Román Dobarco et al (2019), and Zhang and Schaap (2017)

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