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SOIL PROTECTION Catalunya - the Balearic Islands / Principality of Andorra

 
 

soil protection (general information)

 

Vienna Soil Declaration

 

soil functions

sustainability criteria

degradation and control processes

soil protection criteria

soil quality indicators

soil maps

what is soil information used fort?

the purpose of soil maps

soil series and correlation

characteristics of a soils map

management and interpretation of soil information on a digital interface

Soil Series and Soil Types catalogue of Catalonia

presentation

criteria

soil Types (> 2010)

soil Series (1993 - 2009)

SOIL SERIES

WHAT ARE SOIL SERIES?

– They constitute the most detailed hierarchical category in a soil
   classification system.

– They are practically independent from the classification system to
    which they refer (Boulaine, 1980)

– Each soil series represents a specific soil class with a unique set of physical,
   chemical and mineralogical characteristics It is the most
   homogenous category in taxonomy.

WHAT ARE SOIL SERIES FOR?

They constitute an essential vehicle for transferring soil information and knowledge from one place (where it was obtained) to another (where there are similar soils).

QWHICH SOILS FORM PART OF A SOIL SERIES?

The soils of a particular series

– have similar observable properties;

– have similar reactions with regard to their use and management;

– have similar horizons in their layout and characteristics;

– are homogenous and have developed from a particular original material
– exhibit properties that vary within a narrowly defined range. The surface horizon
   and soil features such as slope, stoniness, the extent of erosion and
   topographical position may all vary, but these features are associated
   with significant differences in the classes and the layout of the
   horizons.

HOW CAN WE DIFFERENTIATE BETWEEN SOIL SERIES?

The following criteria are generally used to differentiate between soil series, with more specific details being established for each country and geographical region:

– classes, thicknesses and the layout of the soil horizons;

– soil structure, colour, texture, reaction, consistency, calcium carbonate
   and soluble salt content, organic matter, coarse elements and
   mineral composition.

Significant differences in any of these properties may serve as the basis for identifying different series. It is very rare for differences to be based on only one of these characteristics because due to their relationship with soil formation processes more than one of them tends to vary at a given time

A series is perfectly characterized by

– its position in the landscape, slope and material of origin;

– eits morphological aspect: its sequence of horizons, structure, colour, coarse
   elements, and depth, etc.;

– eits functional aspect: its temperature regime, drainage class, permeability,
   etc.;

– its mineralogy: the nature of its clay and other minerals;

– its analytical aspect: its particle size and distribution,
   reaction, cation exchange capacity (CIC), iron
   content, organic carbon content, calcium carbonate, etc.;

– the permitted range of variation for each of its characteristics.

HOW ARE SOIL SERIES DENOMINATED?

A soil series normally bears the name of the area where it was first recognized, which is a place at which the soil in question is well represented in the surrounding area.

Soil series should therefore be described for each territory and should have locally appropriate names. At meetings and in scientific works, it is habitual to use higher hierarchical levels.

CORRELATION OF SOILS

Each series should be described in a detailed way, following a standardised format applied by the different survey teams. This definition is dynamic, because it can be improved with time; as knowledge of the soil increases, it is possible to improve the definition of a given series.

In order to avoid duplications, the Department of Agriculture of the USA (USDA) created the figure of soils correlator, with three important functions:

– to check that each candidate for recognition as a new series really is such and
   that it has been described according to the established standard

– to keep a single, constantly up-dated, soil series record;

– to check that the limits established for map units coincide with those of earlier
   maps.





The limits of the map units used for these two maps concur due to a
supervising correlation that was carried out by the map correlator
(J. A. Martínez-Casasnovas)


Correlation is very important task and one that, evidently, can only be carried out by specialists with considerable experience in soil mapping and who work independently and systematically.



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