Mapping and understanding the regional farmland SOC distribution in southern China using a Bayesian spatial model

Information on the spatial distribution of soil organic carbon (SOC) in regional farmland is crucial for improving management and production. Mapping SOC in farmlands is challenging due to the strong variation of SOC caused by the influence of natural and anthropogenic activities. Additionally, curr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bifeng Hu, Yibo Geng, Hanjie Ni, Zhou Shi, Zheng Wang, Nan Wang, Jipeng Luo, Modian Xie, Qian Zou, Thomas Optiz, Hongyi Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-08-01
Series:Geoderma
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016706125002873
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Summary:Information on the spatial distribution of soil organic carbon (SOC) in regional farmland is crucial for improving management and production. Mapping SOC in farmlands is challenging due to the strong variation of SOC caused by the influence of natural and anthropogenic activities. Additionally, currently widely used predictive models usually suffer from a lack of model interpretability. To fill these gaps, here we use a Bayesian spatial model termed Integrated Nested Laplace Approximation with the Stochastic Partial Differential Equation (INLA-SPDE) to produce the fine scale SOC map in the farmland of Jiangxi Province, south China based on an extensive soil survey dataset (n = 16,050). The competitive adaptive reweighted sampling algorithm − partial least square (CARS-PLS) algorithm is adopted to select the most related covariates from the original covariates pool. Then, the performance of Random Forest (RF), Geographically Weighted Regression (GWR), and Ordinary Kriging (OK) was compared with INLA-SPDE. Finally, an interpretable machine learning model, the SHapley Additive exPlanation (SHAP), is used to quantify the environmental covariates’ contribution to mapping SOC, as well as mapping spatial varying primary covariates for predicting SOC in the study area. We find that INLA-SPDE was able to handle a large data and performed much better than OK and GWR with an improvement of 38.89 % and 117.39 % in R2, respectively. It also outperforms RF. Overall, amount of straw return, mean annual precipitation, mean annual solar radiation are the most important covariates for mapping SOC. Locally, soil management are the most important covariates for mapping SOC in 50.52 % regions of the study area, followed by climate factors (22.06 %), soil properties (17.09 %), terrain (6.38 %), lithology (2.21 %) and biota factors (1.72 %). Our study demonstrates the advantages of INLA-SPDE on mapping SOC compared with geostatistical and RF for SOC mapping and provides valuable implications for interpreting the results of digital soil mapping.
ISSN:1872-6259