Agronomy (Nov 2021)

The Effect of Soil Sampling Density and Spatial Autocorrelation on Interpolation Accuracy of Chemical Soil Properties in Arable Cropland

  • Dorijan Radočaj,
  • Irena Jug,
  • Vesna Vukadinović,
  • Mladen Jurišić,
  • Mateo Gašparović

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11122430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 2430

Abstract

Read online

Knowledge of the relationship between soil sampling density and spatial autocorrelation with interpolation accuracy allows more time- and cost-efficient spatial analysis. Previous studies produced contradictory observations regarding this relationship, and this study aims to determine and explore under which conditions the interpolation accuracy of chemical soil properties is affected. The study area covered 823.4 ha of agricultural land with 160 soil samples containing phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5) and potassium oxide (K2O) values. The original set was split into eight subsets using a geographically stratified random split method, interpolated using the ordinary kriging (OK) and inverse distance weighted (IDW) methods. OK and IDW achieved similar interpolation accuracy regardless of the soil chemical property and sampling density, contrary to the majority of previous studies which observed the superiority of kriging as a deterministic interpolation method. The primary dependence of interpolation accuracy to soil sampling density was observed, having R2 in the range of 56.5–83.4% for the interpolation accuracy assessment. While this study enables farmers to perform efficient soil sampling according to the desired level of detail, it could also prove useful to professions dependent on field sampling, such as biology, geology, and mining.

Keywords