Abstract

This research analyzes the relationships between “soil” and “organisms” within the framework of the Jenny equation, a fundamental expression in soil science that is the theoretical basis for modeling the complex occurrence of soils on landscapes. This analysis is based on the interpretation of the indeterminate function “f” of the equation as “statistical dependence between categorical variables”. The categories of the “soil” component of the equation have been defined as “diagnostic horizons”, and those of the “organisms” factor as synthetic types of “land cover”. After applying these criteria to 424 soil profiles studied in a region with an oceanic climate in northern Spain, a multiple correspondence analysis showed pedologically consistent groupings between diagnostic horizons and categories of climate, land cover, relief, and parent material factors. Subsequently, a bivariate analysis detailed pedologically consistent relationships between diagnostic horizons and land cover categories. In the context the scarcity of quantitative information on soil and forming factor relationships, this work provides criteria to statistically assess the role of land cover in such relationships. This soil forming factor is the one whose spatial representation is more generalized and detailed, hence its interest in the development of soil mapping models.

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