140 likes | 278 Views
Making Interpretations Based on Soil Map Unit Information. FOR 4114 Spring, 2010 Dr. John M. Galbraith, CSES. Types of Data in SSURGO Tables. Numerical Data – Real Numbers and Integers Some are ranges of values, some are single calculations. Some are continuous (0 to ∞ )
E N D
Making Interpretations Based on Soil Map Unit Information FOR 4114 Spring, 2010 Dr. John M. Galbraith, CSES
Types of Data in SSURGO Tables • Numerical Data – Real Numbers and Integers • Some are ranges of values, some are single calculations. • Some are continuous (0 to ∞) • Some are constrained by limits (0-14 pH, 0-100%) • If not stated otherwise in the aggregation method, the representative (median) value is used. • Ordinal Classes – Numbers, Letters, Codes, Classes • These are not ranges, they are ratings • EX: Class IIw, IVe, Vis • EX: 1, 2a, 2b, 3, 4 • EX: Class A, B, C, D • EX: Poorly, moderately well, well drained
Examples • Clay Content >>> Low Value = 27% High Value = 35% Repr. Value = 32% • Site Index – White Oak = 85 • Available Water Supply, 0 to 150cm = 13.65 (calculated)
Interpretive Ratings • Examples: • Poor, Fair, Good Source of something… • EX: Source of sand • Very Low to Very High Risk of hazard… • EX: Subsidence • Very Poor to Very Good Quality for use as… • EX: Woodland wildlife habitat • Not Limited to Severely Limited for some purpose… • EX: Dwellings with basements, Slow rate treatment of wastewater • Not Hydric or Hydric • Soil is either hydric or not • Poorly Suited to Well Suited for some purpose… • EX: Mechanical planting of trees
Soil and Water Properties • Soil Chemical Properties – Numerical • pH = 6.4 - 7.0 (R.V. = 6.7) • Soil Erosion Factors – Numerical and Ordinal • K factor (used in RUSLE) – 0.10 • WEG (classes used in wind erosion prediction) – 2 (ordinal) • Soil Physical Properties – Numerical and Ordinal • Clay% - 27% – 35% (R.V. = 32%) • Texture – fine sandy loam • Soil Qualities and Features – Numerical and Ordinal • Depth to restrictive layer - >200 cm • Hydrologic soil group - A • Water Features – Numerical and Ordinal • Depth to water table – 50 to 100 cm • Flooding frequency class - common
Suitability and Limitation Ratings • Building Site Development – Ordinal Classes • Construction Materials – Ordinal Source Classes • Disaster Recovery Planning – Ordinal Classes • Land Classifications – Ordinal Classes, some Boolean • Land Management – Ordinal Classes, some Suitabilities • Military Operations – Ordinal Classes • Recreational Development – Ordinal Classes • Sanitary Facilities – Ordinal Classes • Vegetative Productivity – NumericalValues • Waste Management – Ordinal Classes • Water Management – Ordinal Classes
Ecological Site Assessment • Ecological Site Native Plant Community • Production (kg/ha) • Composition (%) • Growth Curve (graph)
Data Aggregation Methods • Dominant Soil – Component that makes up largest composition • EX: You want the most frequent (highest %) component if 2+ cmpnts. • Dominant Condition – Rating that makes up largest composition • EX: You want the majority rating if there are 2+ components • All Components – Lists all components and their rating • EX: For Soil Classification, you may want to list all components • Weighted Average – Gives the weighted average of real values • EX: The average subsoil clay% for the map unit, not just one soil • Most Limiting • EX: You want to know about the limitation that is most expensive to fix • Least Limiting • EX: You want to know whether any slightly limited soils occur out there
Special Conditions • No Aggregation Needed • EX: Only one value per map unit because values are assigned by map unit properties (e.g. slope%), not by individual component • Percentage Cutoff Value • EX: We only want to consider map units where the hydric soils make up 90% or more of the unit (excludes those with only hydric inclusions) • Low Value or High Value • EX: If the data is numerical and has a range of low, representative, or high, we can choose the low or the high rather than the (default) representative value.
Dominant Soil versus Dominant Condition • EX: Alpha, the dominant component, makes up 55%, it’s slight limitation rating or pH properties are applied to the whole map unit. • EX: Beta and Gamma have severe limits for a specific use, but the dominant Alpha component has only slight limits. If the composition of Beta + Gamma exceeds that of Alpha, the severe limit rating is applied to the whole map unit.
Probability Values for Rating Reasons • NOTE: Probability Values (0.00 to 1.00) are included for each Ordinal Rating • These fuzzy logic values are used to tell the user about membership in a rating class.
Rating Determination Charts • Section 6.18 in the National Soil Survey Handbook:http://soils.usda.gov/technical/handbook/contents/part618ex.html#ex1
μ 0.03 0.02 E.C. mmhos/cm 0.01 0 0.50 1.00 P Focus on Electrical Conductivity (a.k.a. salinity) • EX: Define membership in the class of soils that are < 0.3 mmhos cm-1; the basis of a slight rating for Risk of Corrosion of Uncoated Steel. • A soil component ranges from 0.00 to 0.02 cm mmhos cm-1; Is it < 0.03 or not?
What if there are two or more components? • EX: If a map unit is Severe for Erosion Hazard for roads/trails, and it has two major components, the component with a more erosive surface texture has a higher probability of being a member of the set of components that earn the severe rating (say 0.90 versus 0.50). • If both have the same surface texture, they would each have the same probability of being a member of the set of components that earn the severe rating (say both were 0.90 ~it depends on the texture they both have).