Abstract

For adequate crop and soil management, rapid and accurate techniques for monitoring soil properties are particularly important when a farmer starts up his activities and needs a diagnosis of his cultivated fields. This study aimed to evaluate the potential of fluorescence measured directly on 146 whole soil solid samples, for predicting key soil properties at the scale of a 6 ha Mediterranean wine estate with contrasting soils. UV-Vis fluorescence measurements were carried out in conjunction with reflectance measurements in the Vis-NIR-SWIR range. Combining PLSR predictions from Vis-NIR-SWIR reflectance spectra and from a set of fluorescence signals enabled us to improve the power of prediction of a number of key agronomic soil properties including SOC, Ntot, CaCO3, iron, fine particle-sizes (clay, fine silt, fine sand), CEC, pH and exchangeable Ca2+ with cross-validation RPD ≥ 2 and R² ≥ 0.75, while exchangeable K+, Na+, Mg2+, coarse silt and coarse sand contents were fairly predicted (1.42 ≤ RPD < 2 and 0.54 ≤ R² < 0.75). Predictions of SOC, Ntot, CaCO3, iron contents, and pH were still good (RPD ≥ 1.8, R² ≥ 0.68) when using a single fluorescence signal or index such as SFR_R or FERARI, highlighting the unexpected importance of red excitations and indices derived from plant studies. The predictive ability of single fluorescence indices or original signals was very significant for topsoil: this is very important for a farmer who wishes to update information on soil nutrient for the purpose of fertility diagnosis and particularly nitrogen fertilization. These results open encouraging perspectives for using miniaturized fluorescence devices enabling red excitation coupled with red or far-red fluorescence emissions directly in the field.

Highlights

  • In order to enable adequate crop and soil management, rapid, accurate techniques are needed for the quantification and monitoring of soil properties

  • Soil properties may be accurately predicted from laboratory reflectance spectroscopy in the visible (Vis, 400–700 nm), near-infrared (NIR, 700–1100 nm), and short-wave infrared (SWIR, 1100–2500 nm) ranges [1,2,3]

  • Some nutrient properties such as exchangeable K+ and Na+ contents were fairly predicted from reflectance spectra only, but a particle size fraction was better predicted from fluorescence, suggesting the complementarity between fluorescence and reflectance spectroscopy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In order to enable adequate crop and soil management, rapid, accurate techniques are needed for the quantification and monitoring of soil properties. This is important when a farmer starts up his activities and needs a diagnosis of the soil properties that characterize the cultivated fields. Organic matter components such as humic and fulvic acids have fluorescent properties [7,8]. Such fluorescent behavior relies on the aromaticity, aliphatic character, degree of polycondensation, content of carboxylic groups or organic free radicals, or presence of amide groups or polysaccharidic structures [9,10,11]. Emission spectra shift towards longer wavelengths with increasing humification [11,12,13]

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.