WANG Shan, LIAO Guitang, XIONG Hongyan, et al. Spatial and Temporal Change in Soil Nutrients in Hilly Area of Southern Sichuan Basin in Past 30 Years[J]. Bulletin of Soiland Water Conservation, 2015, 35(5): 289-295.
DOI:
WANG Shan, LIAO Guitang, XIONG Hongyan, et al. Spatial and Temporal Change in Soil Nutrients in Hilly Area of Southern Sichuan Basin in Past 30 Years[J]. Bulletin of Soiland Water Conservation, 2015, 35(5): 289-295. DOI: 10.13961/j.cnki.stbctb.2015.05.054.
Spatial and Temporal Change in Soil Nutrients in Hilly Area of Southern Sichuan Basin in Past 30 Years
[Objective] The spatial and temporal changes in soil nutrients in hilly area of Southern Sichuan basin was investigated in order to provide support for the soil quality management and the agricultural sustainable development.[Methods] Using the data of the second soil survey in 1982 and the soil fertility monitoring data in 2011
the article analyzed spatial and temporal changes in soil nutrients in Changxing township
Yibin City under the SPSS 17.0 and ArcGIS 9.3 platforms.[Results] (1) Among the five soil indicators
the highest coefficient of variation was available phosphorus
the rest indexes varied between 22.18% to 37.03%
indicating a moderate variation.(2) Semivariogram analyses indicated that the nugget/sill of soil nutrients ranged from 25% to 75% in 1982
showing a medium variation. Both of the structural and human factors had influence on it. In 2011
the spatial autocorrelation of each index was weak
and the human factor played a dominant role.(3) The ordinary Kriging interpolation showed that nearly half of the study area have high nitrogen
and the area with total nitrogen and alkali-hydrolyzable nitrogen content in high grade and above accounted for 39.26% and 47.94% respectively. Although phosphorus increased slightly
the content of available phosphorus below 5 mg/kg accounted for 52.68% of the area
indicating a serious phosphorus deficiency. The potassium content in the area of an upper-middle class reduced
mostly in the middle and lower levels
or even extremely low levels.[Conclusion] After nearly 30 years of land use
the soil nutrient in the northern area is higher than in the south
with more emphasis on nitrogen and little on phosphorus and potassium fertilizer. More effots should be devoted to limiting inputs of nitrogen and adding phosphorus and potassium in the south of the study area.
Córdova C, Sohi S P, Lark R M, et al. Resolving the spatial variability of soil N using fractions of soil organic matter[J]. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 2012,147(1):66-72.
Kravchenko A, Bullock D G. Spatial variability of soybean quality data as a function of field topography(Ⅰ):Spatial data analysis[J]. Crop Science, 2002,42(3):804-815.
Eghball B, Schepers J S, Negahban M, et al. Spatial and temporal variability of soil nitrate and corn yield:Multifractal analysis[J]. Agronomy Journal, 2003,95(2):339-346.