Soil Fertility Module 4 Soil Taxonomy
Soil Fertility Module 4 Soil Taxonomy
d. Ustic
- intermediate between udic and aridic,
deficient sometime during the year
Soil Moisture Regimes
e. Aridic or torric
-very deficient, long dry periods, short wet
periods, moist for <90 consecutive days
f. xeric
-only in the temperate areas; dry- >45
consecutive days in summer and moist > 45
consecutive days in winter
Diagnostic Horizon
Surface (Epipedon) Subsurface
Mollic Argilic
Umbric Natric
Histic Spodic
Ochric Oxic
Cambric
Surface (Epipedon)
Mollic Epipedon
- thick, dark, soft, surface layer
- characteristics:
a. thick – greater than 10 inches;
high base saturation >50%
b. mineral soil
c. Soils formed under prairie
vegetation
Surface (Epipedon)
Umbric
- like mollic, but low base saturation
Histic
- Organic soil, saturated with water
Ochric
- thin, light colored
- surface layers that do not fit any of the
surface
Other Epipedons
Melanic
- mineral horizon; very black in color, high
OM content (organic C > 6%)
-characteristic of soils high in allophane;
developed from volcanic ash
-thick- >30cm
-extremely light and fluffy for a mineral soil
Comparison of Epipedons
Ochric
Histic
Lighter in
thinner
color
More OM
Mollic
Low base
Common in saturation
volcanic ash soils
Umbric
Melanic
Subsurface
Argilic (Bt)
- illuvial horizon of clay accumulation
Natric (Btn)
- same as argillic but with > 15%
exchangeable sodium (Na)
Subsurface
Spodic (Bhs or Bs)
- illuvial accumulation of oxides of Al and Fe
(sesquioxides) and OM
- red or dark red in color
- only found in acid sandy soils, with high
rainfall
- generally found below E horizon
Subsurface
Oxic (Bo)
- very weathered layer of only Fe and Al
oxides and 1:1 clay minerals
- low pH and not very fertile
Cambic (Bw)
- slightly altered layer
- not weathered enough to be argilic
NONE
- no diagnostic subsurface horizon present
Comparison of Subsurface Diagnostic
Horizons
Spodic
Cambic
More Al and
Fe Less
developed
Argillic
More
Highly weathered sodium
Natric
oxic
Soil Categories based on Diagnostic
Characteristics
Fine clayey, kaolinitic, isohyperthermic, Typic Palehumults
Order
Suborder
Great Group
Subgroup
Family
Series
Order
Fine clayey, kaolinitic, isohyperthermic, Typic Palehumults
Order
Pale=
excessive
development
Family
Fine clayey, kaolinitic, isohyperthermic, Typic Palehumults
Subgroup
Family
Great Group
Texture, clay minerals, temp.,
Based on soil properties that affect Suborder
Subgroup
Family
Great Group
- recent soils
- minimal development, little
horizonation, young soils
- characteristically have A/C or A/R
profiles, exhibit only ephemeral soil
development
- largely confined to surface horizons.
- may have an Ap horizon
-12.5% of the world
2.Vertisols
- inverted
- soils with high clay content, large shrink
swell potential, gradually invert on
themselves
- mollic or ochric + none
-2.1% of the world
3.Inceptisols
- inception
- soils shows the beginning of horizons
development little or no illuviation
- ochric or umbric + cambic
-15.8% of the world
4.Aridisols
- arid regions of the world (19%)
- <10 in of rainfall, usually contain
carbonates
- NaCl salt accumulates on the surface and
in the subsurface
-ochric + cambic or argillic or other
diagnostic feature
5. Mollisols
- soils with thick, dark, soft surface
- mollic + cambic, natric, argillic or none
- high base saturation
- soils of the grassland
-9% of the world
6. Spodosols
- acid sandy soils with thick E and red Bhs
- ochric and spodic
-infertile soils
-5.4% of the world
7. Alfisols
2. Second Order
- intensive (detailed); general agriculture,
urban planning; minimum size delineation
0.6 to 4 hectares
Orders of Soil Survey
3. Third Order
- extensive; rangeland, community area
planning; minimum size delineation: 1.6 to
16 hectares
4. Fourth Order
- extensive(reconnaissance); for broad land
use potential and general land management;
minimum size delineation: 16 – 252 has.
Orders of Soil Survey
5. Fifth Order
- exploratory; regional planning, national
planning; minimum size delineation: 252 to
4000 hectares.