How serious a problem is subsoil compaction in the Netherlands? A survey based on probability sampling
Author:
Brus Dick J.ORCID, van den Akker Jan J. H.
Abstract
Abstract. Although soil compaction is widely recognized as a soil threat to soil
resources, reliable estimates of the acreage of overcompacted soil and
of the level of soil compaction parameters are not available. In the
Netherlands data on subsoil compaction were collected at 128 locations
selected by stratified random sampling. A map showing the risk of
subsoil compaction in five classes was used for
stratification. Measurements of bulk density, porosity, clay content
and organic matter content were used to compute the relative bulk
density and relative porosity, both expressed as a fraction of
a threshold value. A subsoil was classified as overcompacted if either
the relative bulk density exceeded 1 or the relative porosity was below
1. The sample data were used to estimate the means of the two subsoil
compaction parameters and the overcompacted areal fraction. The
estimated global means of relative bulk density and relative porosity
were 0.946 and 1.090, respectively. The estimated areal fraction of
the Netherlands with overcompacted subsoils was 43 %. The
estimates per risk map unit showed two groups of map units: a “low-risk ” group (units 1 and 2, covering only 4.6 % of the total
area) and a “high-risk” group (units 3, 4 and 5). The estimated areal
fraction of overcompacted subsoil was 0 % in the low-risk
unit and 47 % in the high-risk unit. The map contains no
information about where overcompacted subsoils occur. This was caused
by the poor association of the risk map units 3, 4 and 5 with the
subsoil compaction parameters and subsoil overcompaction. This can be
explained by the lack of time for recuperation.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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