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Unit 4: Soil Taxonomy Chapter 7. Objectives Understand categories of the U.S. taxonomic system How soil properties help distinguish soil families Knowledge.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 4: Soil Taxonomy Chapter 7. Objectives Understand categories of the U.S. taxonomic system How soil properties help distinguish soil families Knowledge."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 4: Soil Taxonomy Chapter 7

2 Objectives Understand categories of the U.S. taxonomic system How soil properties help distinguish soil families Knowledge of locations of various soil orders Investigate how soil temps and moistures are categorized

3 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy Soils are named, mapped as a geologic entity or individual 1 st taxonomic system began in 1938 NRCS began extensive use of the system in 1965 12 orders separate all soils  Pedons are identified to help separate soil orders (minimum 3.3 ft 2, & as deep as roots grow)

4 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy  Order Most general category Histosols  Organic soils Entisols  Undeveloped soils Inceptisols  Slightly developed Andisols  Volcanic material Vertisols  Swelling-clay

5 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy Gellisols  Must have permafrost in the top 6’ Mollisols  Most extensive soils in the U.S.  Naturally fertile, slightly leached  Can be semiarid to subhumid climates Alfisols  Fertile in favorable moisture conditions  Usually very productive Ultisols  Leached, acidic  Moderate to low fertility

6 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy Aridisols  Arid-region soils  Can be very productive Oxisols  Hot, wet tropics  Conducive to year-round plant growth Spodosols  Found mostly in cool climates  Poorest soils for cultivation  Must have lime & fertilization to grow crops

7 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy  Suborder Differentiated based on soil properties & horizons Soil moisture, soil temp, dominating effects of chemical or textural features  Great Groups Differentiated by soil horizons & soil features  Accumulated clay, iron, humus, hard pans/cement layers  Subgroup Three kinds of subgroups  Represent the central (typic) concept of the soil group  Properties that intergrade towards other groups, etc.

8 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy  Properties that prevent its classification as typic or an intergrade to another category  Family Soil properties important to the growth of plants Behavior of soils when used for engineering Important soil properties: texture, mineralogy, pH, avg. soil temp, moisture, permeability, thickness of horizons, structure, consistency  Series 18,000 soil series identified Typically named after something local Differentiated on the basis of observable & mappable soil characteristics

9 U. S. System of Soil Taxonomy Must have similar color, texture, structure, consistency, thickness, pH, similar horizon arrangements, similar chemical & mineralogy properties  Phase Not considered to be an official category, but being used to further differentiate, if needed Further delineates soils w/in a series

10 Soil Moisture & Temperature Regimes Soil Moisture Regimes  Attempt to indicate the extent of naturally available water in the soil depth of maximum root proliferation  Aquic Wet w/ anaerobic saturation long enough to produce visual evidence of poor aeration  Peraquic Tidal marsh or inland depression where groundwater is always at or near the surface

11 Soil Moisture & Temperature Regimes  Udic Usually has adequate water throughout the yr  Perudic Extremely wet, percolation in all months when not frozen  Ustic Moisture is limited but is present during the growing season  Xeric Deficient in water & w/ a dry cropping season Most precipitation in the winter

12 Soil Moisture & Temperature Regimes  Aridic Very water deficient Long dry periods, short wet periods Soil Temperature Regimes  Based on the mean annual soil temp (MAST)  Mean summer soil temp  Mean winter soil temp  Determined at ~2’ depth  Cryic MAST 46° F

13 Soil Moisture & Temperature Regimes  Frigid MAST 46° F Mean summer temp >11° F higher than mean winter temp  Mesic MAST 46 - 59° F Mean summer temp >43° than mean winter temp  Thermic MAST 59 - 72° F Mean summer temp >11° than mean winter temp

14 Soil Moisture & Temperature Regimes  Hyperthermic MAST >72° F Mean summer temp >11° than mean winter temp  Add iso prefix to the classification if the mean summer & winter temps vary <11° F

15 Additional Terminology for Family Groupings Particle-size Classes  Fragmental Mostly stones, cobbles, gravel, etc. Fine-earth component <10% of soil volume  Sandy skeletal >35% rock fragments Fine-earth fraction is sand, sandy loam  Loamy skeletal >35% rock fragments Fine-earth fraction loamy

16 Additional Terminology for Family Groupings  Clayey skeletal >35% rock fragments Fine-earth fraction >35% clay  Sandy Texture is sand, loamy sand  Loamy Finer than sand or loamy, <35% clay  Clayey >35% clay  Very fine >60% clay

17 Additional Terminology for Family Groupings Soil Mineralogy Classes  Ferritic: >40% iron oxide in fine-earth fraction  Kaolinitic: >50% kaolinite & other 1:1 or nonexpanding clay  Carbonatic: >40% carbonates plus gypsum  Magnesic: >40% magnesium-silicate minerals  Smectitic: clayey soil w/ more smectite than any other clay  Siliceous: >90% silica minerals  Mixed: not dominated by any mineral type

18 Distribution of Soil Orders Soil orders diverse & unevenly distributed Some land areas don’t correspond to any order See inside front & back covers for distributions of soil orders

19 Gellisols Occur in tundra regions Cold & relatively barren May have exposed rock intermixed Yukon & Northwest Territories of Canada, northern 2/3 of Alaska

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21 Histisols Organic soils formed in cold or wet regions Can occur almost anywhere Found in FL, LA, GA, some in the Great Lakes states Large area found in Canada

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24 Entisols Lack horizons due to being a young soil, or weathering is ineffective Widely distributed in the U.S. Include river floodplains, rocky soils, mountainous areas, barren islands of East & Gulf coasts, beach sands Found on all continents Can be excellent ag soil, but may be very unproductive

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27 Inceptisols Weakly developed soils More development than Entisols Mostly found in Middle Atlantic & Pacific states, northern Rockies Develop in many climates Largest area globally found in China

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29 Andisols Weakly to moderately developed Most from volcanic materials Extensively found in the Pacific Ocean & Hawaii Some also in the northwestern U.S.

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32 Aridisols Long dry periods, short periods of wetness Found in the U.S. primarily in the western mountain states & Pacific states Low rainfall, scattered grasses, desert shrubs Rank second worldwide in area to Entisols

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35 Mollisols Dark-colored soils of grasslands & some hardwood forests Deep, dark-colored, fertile A horizon (mollic epipedon)  Mollic epipedon extends from surface to ~2’ depth Properties & Classification of Mollisols  Large number of suborders  Naturally fertile  Easily managed

36 Mollisols Management of Mollisols  Formed under grasses, forests  Tend to be most fertile soil  High humus content  High concentration of N  In wetter climates don’t need irrigation, but in dryer areas can produce highly  May become acidic  Black soil colors to depth of 2-3’

37 Mollisols  1/5 of the U.S. soils  Can withstand much variation in cropping  Limited leaching  Quite fertile, even w/out fertilization  Little to no lime needed  Only Alfisols may have high natural productivity  Texture, depth, climate make it ideal for cropping and highly valuable

38 Mollisols Distribution of Mollisols  Found in the Great Plains region of the U.S. extending north into Canada, south to Gulf of Mexico  Most extensive of U.S. soil orders

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41 Vertisols Self-mixing soils, >30% shrink/swell clays Found mostly in central & southeastern TX & along lower Mississippi River

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44 Alfisols Usually enough precipitation to move clays downward & form an argillic (clay accumulation) horizon Generally have high CEC’s, usually fairly fertile Properties & Classification of Alfisols  Medium to high supply of basic cations Evidence of mild leaching  Water is adequate for plant growth for 3+ warm season mos.

45 Alfisols Management of Alfisols  If topography & climate are favorable; alfisols can be very productive  Most are leached of lime, and can have an acidic zone If leached enough, forms an E horizon  Erosion exposing clays at the surface not favorable for plant growth  Most naturally productive soils w/out fertilization or irrigation

46 Alfisols  Usually will require lime amendments  Alfisols & Mollisols generally located in a region’s breadbasket Distribution of Alfisols  North-central states & mountain states  Occur on all continents  Corn belt of IN, OH, MI, WI, IL  Woodland soils in TX, CO

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49 Spodosols High sand content High rainfall w/ easy leaching  Humus, colloids leached Cold, wet climates are common Mostly found in Cascade Mountains in WA, OR, New England, & Great Lakes states  Also found in FL

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52 Ultisols Warm, humid regions Usually too acidic to be classified as a Mollisol/Alfisol, not weathered enough to be an Oxisol Located in southern Atlantic states, eastern south-central states, Pacific sates

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55 Oxisols Most extensively weathered soils Typically found on old landforms in tropical, subtropical climates Found only in HA, Puerto Rico, Guam Extensive in South America, Africa

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58 Assignment


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