Search results for "soil classification"

showing 9 items of 99 documents

DYNAMICS OF SOIL NUTRIENT STATUS OF HIGHBUSH BLUEBERRY IN LATVIA, 2006-2017

2019

In Latvia, the first commercial highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) plantings have been established on a few hectares at the end of the 1990th. Since then, a remarkable growth has noticed and today the total cultivated area reaches 280 hectares. An increasing market demand for fresh and processed berries provides a future upward trend in the development of blueberry crop in Latvia. In general, blueberry is a highly specialized crop that has definite soil agrochemical and climatic requirements. There are two main soil types used for blueberry cultivation in Latvia: well-drained acid sandy soils with high organic matter content and sphagnum peat soils. Evaluation and management of pl…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPeatbiologyMaterials Science (miscellaneous)Soil classificationbiology.organism_classificationIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringCropNutrientchemistryAgronomySoil waterEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterBusiness and International ManagementHectareVacciniumSWS Journal of EARTH and PLANETARY SCIENCES
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Contamination from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the soil of a botanic garden localized next to a former manufacturing gas plant in Pale…

2010

The Botanical Garden lies within the city of Palermo, a few meters away from one of the largest unused Manufacturing Gas Plant in Sicily. The total concentrations of PAHs (23 compounds) in the soil of Botanical Garden ranged from 947 to 18,072 microg/kg. The wide range of PAH concentrations (RSD=84%) found in the soil samples indicates heterogeneous levels of contamination in the area and this can be explained by considering the different tree distributions which prevents the homogeneous deposition of pollutants on the soil. Soils collected in the Botanical Garden generally showed the highest PAH concentrations, being almost 2-3 times higher than the concentration samples obtained in the ur…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPersistent organic pollutantEnvironmental EngineeringSoil testHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGCMS Organic contaminants CarcinogeniMonitoring Botanic garden PalermoIndustrial WasteSoil classificationPollutionSoil contaminationSettore CHIM/12 - Chimica Dell'Ambiente E Dei Beni CulturaliDeposition (aerosol physics)chemistryItalyEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceSoil PollutantsOrganic matterBotanical gardenPolycyclic CompoundsGasesWaste Management and DisposalJournal of hazardous materials
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Responses of soil carbon and nitrogen transformations to stump removal

2012

We studied in central Finland whether stump harvesting after clear felling of coniferous forest poses further short-term changes in soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics when compared to the traditional site preparation method, mounding. Exposed mineral soil patches in Norway spruce (Picea abies) dominated clear-cut stands were sampled 1–5 years after the treatments. The extent of the exposed mineral soil surface was significantly larger at the stump removal sites when compared to the mounding sites. No differences were found in soil pH, organic matter content or total concentration of soil C between the treatments or treatment years. Total concentration of soil N was consistently higher and …

chemistry.chemical_classificationSoil testEcological ModelingSoil organic matterfungiForestrySoil classificationSoil scienceSoil carbondigestive systemcomplex mixturesSoil qualitybody regionssurgical procedures operativeAgronomychemistrySoil pHStump harvestinglcsh:SD1-669.5Environmental scienceOrganic matterlcsh:ForestrySilva Fennica
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Method optimization to measure polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) concentrations in soils of Bratislava, Slovakia.

2010

We modified an analytical method to determine polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in urban soils of Bratislava (Slovakia). Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) introduced as a clean-up step for soil extracts substantially reduced matrix enhancements when PBDEs were measured with gas chromatography-negative chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (GC-NCI-MS). The resulting method proved to be accurate, precise, and showed low detection limits. The sum of 15 PBDE concentrations in surface horizons of Bratislava soils ranged from 87 to 627 pg g(-1). PBDE concentrations were mostly higher in surface than deeper horizons probably because of atmospheric deposition and lack of substantial vertical…

endocrine systemSlovakiaSoil testHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisToxicologyGas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometrychemistry.chemical_compoundSoilPolybrominated diphenyl ethersHalogenated Diphenyl EthersSoil Pollutantsreproductive and urinary physiologyChromatographySoil organic matterDiphenyl etherUrbanizationReproducibility of ResultsSoil classificationGeneral MedicineReference StandardsPollutionSoil contaminationhumanitieschemistryEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterChromatography GelPolybrominated BiphenylsEnvironmental MonitoringEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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The anthropogenic sealing of soils in urban areas

2009

The sealing of soils by impervious materials is, normally, detrimental to its ecological functions. Exchanges of energy, water and gases are restricted or hampered and an increasing pressure is being exerted on adjacent, non sealed areas. The negative effects span from loss of plant production and natural habitats to increased floods, pollution, and health risks and consequently higher social costs. Environmental Agencies produce periodical reports where the phenomenon of soil consumption by urban infrastructures is monitored with extremely sophisticated geographical tools but little specific research is available that describes the effects of soil sealing. This paper reviews some recent co…

gas transferwater cycleManagement Monitoring Policy and LawUrban areacomplex mixturesEnvironmental protectionSoil functionsconsumoImpervious surfacesuoli urbani; impermeabilizzazione; consumoEnvironmental degradationNature and Landscape Conservationgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologySoil classificationimpermeabilizzazionesuoli urbaniSoil contaminationEnvironmental soil scienceEuropeUrban Studiesurban sprawlSettore AGR/14 - Pedologiaurban soilSoil waterimpactEnvironmental science
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Comparing Different approaches - Data mining, Geostatistic, and Deterministic pedology - to assess the Frequency of WRB reference soil groups in the …

2014

Estimating frequency of soil classes in map unit is always affected by some degree of uncertainty, especially at small scales, with a larger generalization. The aim of this study was to compare different possible approaches - data mining, geostatistic, deterministic pedology - to assess the frequency of WRB Reference Soil Groups (RSG) in the major Italian soil regions. In the soil map of Italy (Costantini et al., 2012), a list of the first five RSG was reported in each major 10 soil regions. The soil map was produced using the national soil geodatabase, which stored 22,015 analyzed and classified pedons, 1,413 soil typological unit (STU) and a set of auxiliary variables (lithology, land-use…

learning machine non-linear kriging soil type classification ItalySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaLearning machine deterministic data mining Bayesian predictivitySoil classification Italy
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Carbon stocks in a 50‑year‑oldEucalyptus camaldulensisstand in Sicily, Italy

2015

Eucalyptus stands in semi-arid areas may contribute to enhance carbon (C) stocks in both biomass and soil. However, the limited information available is mainly focused on short-rotation plantations. In this study, the above- and below-ground C pools in five 50-year-old Eucalyptus camaldulensis Dehnh. stands planted on Miocenic evaporitic deposits in Sicily, Italy, with a xeric and thermic pedoclimate, were measured. Above-ground biomass was determined by partitioning and weighing branches, stem and leaves. Below-ground C pools included the determination of litter, root biomass, and soil organic and inorganic C. In terms of the above-ground biomass, the E. camaldulensis stand accumulated on …

rootsbelow-ground biomassSettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E Selvicolturasemi-arid Mediterranean climateSettore AGR/13 - Chimica AgrariaBiomassDeserts and xeric shrublandssoillitterbelow-ground biomaabove-ground biomassTotal organic carbonevaporitic depositsSoil organic matterabove-ground biomass; below-ground biomass; evaporitic deposits; litter; roots; semi-arid Mediterranean climate; soil; ForestryForestrySoil classificationForestryrootEucalyptusevaporitic depositEucalyptus camaldulensisAgronomySettore AGR/14 - PedologiaLitterEnvironmental scienceabove-ground biomaSouthern Forests: a Journal of Forest Science
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ESTIMATING SOIL PARTICLE-SIZE DISTRIBUTION FOR SICILIAN SOILS

2009

The soil particle-size distribution (PSD) is commonly used for soil classification and for estimating soil behavior. An accurate mathematical representation of the PSD is required to estimate soil hydraulic properties and to compare texture measurements from different classification systems. The objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of the Haverkamp and Parlange (HP) and Fredlund et al. (F) PSD models to fit 243 measured PSDs from a wide range of 38 005_Bagarello(547)_33 18-11-2009 11:55 Pagina 38 soil textures in Sicily and to test the effect of the number of measured particle diameters on the fitting of the theoretical PSD. For each soil textural class, the best fitting perf…

sicilian soilsParticle-size distributionMean squared errorSoil textureMechanical Engineeringlcsh:SBioengineeringSoil classificationSoil sciencelcsh:S1-972Industrial and Manufacturing EngineeringSoil gradationlcsh:AgricultureLoamParticle-size distributionSoil waterRange (statistics)Settore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliParticle-size distribution Particle-size distribution models Soil physical properties.lcsh:Agriculture (General)MathematicsJournal of Agricultural Engineering
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The “genetic erosion” of the soil ecosystem

2013

Abstract This paper takes into consideration the influence of human activities on the loss of pedodiversity in a Mediterranean area due to large scale farming. In particular it examines the quantitative and qualitative soil changes in a period of 53 years (from 1955 to 2008) evaluating the loss of soil diversity at soil subgroups level of the USDA Soil Taxonomy system. The following indices were used: richness; Shannon’s diversity index; Simpson diversity index; Shannon’s evenness index; Simpson’s evenness index. In this case study, considering what we observed in time, the human intervention in soil transformation could increase the diversity in the landscape in an initial phase, but forwa…

Pedodiversity,Anthropogenic soil,Soil genetic erosionAnthropogenic soilEcologybusiness.industrySoil ScienceSoil classificationPedodiversitySoil genetic erosionDiversity indexGeographylcsh:TA1-2040Settore AGR/14 - PedologiaAgricultureEcosystemSpecies richnesslcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)PedodiversityGenetic erosionbusinesshuman activitiesAgronomy and Crop ScienceNature and Landscape ConservationWater Science and TechnologyUSDA soil taxonomyInternational Soil and Water Conservation Research
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