Optimizing Sampling Strategies for Near-Surface Soil Carbon Inventory: One Size Doesn’t Fit All

Author:

Bettigole Charles1,Hanle Juliana2,Kane Daniel A.3ORCID,Pagliaro Zoe1,Kolodney Shaylan14,Szuhay Sylvana1,Chandler Miles1,Hersh Eli1,Wood Stephen A.35,Basso Bruno2ORCID,Goodwin Douglas Jeffrey6ORCID,Hardy Shane7,Wolf Zachary4,Covey Kristofer R.1

Affiliation:

1. Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, USA

2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48823, USA

3. Yale School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA

4. Caney Fork Farms, Carthage, TN 37030, USA

5. The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, VA 22203, USA

6. Texas A&M AgriLife Research, College Station, TX 77845, USA

7. Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, Tarrytown, NY 10591, USA

Abstract

Soils comprise the largest pool of terrestrial carbon yet have lost significant stocks due to human activity. Changes to land management in cropland and grazing systems present opportunities to sequester carbon in soils at large scales. Uncertainty in the magnitude of this potential impact is largely driven by the difficulties and costs associated with measuring near-surface (0–30 cm) soil carbon concentrations; a key component of soil carbon stock assessments. Many techniques exist to optimize sampling, yet few studies have compared these techniques at varying sample intensities. In this study, we performed ex-ante, high-intensity sampling for soil carbon concentrations at four farms in the eastern United States. We used post hoc Monte-Carlo bootstrapping to investigate the most efficient sampling approaches for soil carbon inventory: K-means stratification, Conditioned Latin Hypercube Sampling (cLHS), simple random, and regular grid. No two study sites displayed similar patterns across all sampling techniques, although cLHS and grid emerged as the most efficient sampling schemes across all sites and strata sizes. The number of strata chosen when using K-means stratification can have a significant impact on sample efficiency, and we caution future inventories from using small strata n, while avoiding even allocation of sample between strata. Our findings reinforce the need for adaptive sampling methodologies where initial site inventory can inform primary, robust inventory with site-specific sampling techniques.

Funder

Caney Fork Farms, Oak Spring Garden Foundation

Noble Research Institute

Skidmore College Faculty-Student Research Fund

The Walton Family Foundation

TomKat Ranch, Globetrotter Foundation

The Soil Inventory Project

Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science

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