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Landscape and soil regionalization in southern Brazilian Amazon and contiguous areas: methodology and relevance for ecological studies

Abstract

Soils of a large tropical area with differentiated landscapes cannot be treated uniformly for ecological applications. We intend to develop a framework based on physiography that can be used in regional applications. The study region occupies more than 1.1 million km² and is located at the junction of the savanna region of Central Brazil and the Amazon forest. It includes a portion of the high sedimentary Central Brazil plateau and large areas of mostly peneplained crystalline shield on the border of the wide inner-Amazon low sedimentary plain. A first broad subdivision was made into landscape regions followed by a more detailed subdivision into soil regions. Mapping information was extracted from soil survey maps at scales of 1:250000-1:500000. Soil units were integrated within a homogenized legend using a set of selected attributes such as taxonomic term, the texture of the B horizon and the associated vegetation. For each region, a detailed inventory of the soil units with their area distribution was elaborated. Ten landscape regions and twenty-four soil regions were recognized and delineated. Soil cover of a region is normally characterized by a cluster composed of many soil units. Soil diversity is comparable in the landscape and the soil regions. Composition of the soil cover is quantitatively expressed in terms of area extension of the soil units. Such geographic divisions characterized by grouping soil units and their spatial estimates must be used for regional ecological applications.

Brazil; Rondônia; Mato Grosso; regional soil diversity


SOIL AND PLANT NUTRITION

Landscape and soil regionalization in southern Brazilian Amazon and contiguous areas: methodology and relevance for ecological studies

Boris VolkoffI, II; Francisco Fujita de Castro MelloII; Stoécio Malta Ferreira MaiaIII; Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino CerriIV, * * Corresponding author < cepcerri@esalq.usp.br>

IInstitut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), BP 64501 - 3439 - Cedex 5 - Montpellier - France

IIUSP/CENA - Lab. de Biogeoquímica Ambiental, C.P. 96 - 13416-000 - Piracicaba, SP - Brasil

IIIInstituto Federal de Alagoas - Campus Piranhas, Av. Sergipe, s/n. - Piranhas, AL - Brasil

IVUSP/ESALQ - Depto. de Ciência do Solo, C.P. 09 - 13418-900 - Piracicaba, SP - Brasil

ABSTRACT

Soils of a large tropical area with differentiated landscapes cannot be treated uniformly for ecological applications. We intend to develop a framework based on physiography that can be used in regional applications. The study region occupies more than 1.1 million km2 and is located at the junction of the savanna region of Central Brazil and the Amazon forest. It includes a portion of the high sedimentary Central Brazil plateau and large areas of mostly peneplained crystalline shield on the border of the wide inner-Amazon low sedimentary plain. A first broad subdivision was made into landscape regions followed by a more detailed subdivision into soil regions. Mapping information was extracted from soil survey maps at scales of 1:250000-1:500000. Soil units were integrated within a homogenized legend using a set of selected attributes such as taxonomic term, the texture of the B horizon and the associated vegetation. For each region, a detailed inventory of the soil units with their area distribution was elaborated. Ten landscape regions and twenty-four soil regions were recognized and delineated. Soil cover of a region is normally characterized by a cluster composed of many soil units. Soil diversity is comparable in the landscape and the soil regions. Composition of the soil cover is quantitatively expressed in terms of area extension of the soil units. Such geographic divisions characterized by grouping soil units and their spatial estimates must be used for regional ecological applications.

Keywords: Brazil, Rondônia, Mato Grosso, regional soil diversity

Introduction

The Amazon Basin is usually regarded as homogeneous environment, having uniform wet climates, similar soils, and uniform wet forest biomes (Bernoux and Volkoff, 2006; Cerri et al., 2007). However, at sub-continental scale, it is not entirely homogenous, particularly with respect to soils. The soil cover appears homogeneous at major taxonomic groups, but this overlooks the substantial heterogeneity that is documented by the Brazilian soil exploratory maps published to date (Projeto Radambrasil, 1973-1986; Embrapa, 1981). In these maps, mapping units include not only various subdivisions of the major soil taxonomic groups but also several other associated secondary soil types. Therefore, this area involves great soil spatial variability, mainly regarding to soil texture which is highly related to ecological processes. It was not highlighted in previous ecological modeling studies, mainly those related to soil organic matter dynamics (Bernoux et al., 2002; Batjes and Dijkshoorn, 1999; Batjes, 2005; Cerri et al., 2007; Cochrane and Cochrane, 2006; Holmes et al., 2006; Moraes et al., 1995; Schaefer et al., 2008).

As soils are closely linked to its local and regional physiography (Webster, 2000; Heuvelink and Webster, 2001), the soil properties in tectonically stable parts of South America, which developed within the uppermost part of old, highly weathered bed rock and have undergone multiple important transformations and transports (Balan et al., 2005; Horbe and Costa, 2005), need to be taken into account by considering the regional physical environment in addition to their general taxonomic definition. Regions having homogeneous geomorphic sequence contain specific soil associations and analogous soils. Therefore, soils must be spatially grouped according to geomorphic or geological criteria and their properties diversity should then be assessed within each regional subdivision.

In order to carry out regional studies successfully, attention should be paid to the soils by using a detailed classification that does not reduce the complexity of the original maps and the geographical location. Therefore, the objective of this research was to identify relevant information from the soil maps of the states of Rondônia and Mato Grosso (1:250000 scale) along with geological and geomorphologic maps in order to develop regional-scale applications. Ecological regionalization methods were discussed in an array of studies (Omernik and Bailey, 1997; Loveland and Merchant, 2004; Mackey et al., 2008; Snelder et al., 2010); and they may provide a framework to generate landscape and soil regionalization.

Materials and Methods

Rondônia-Mato Grosso Region Characterization

The Rondônia-Mato Grosso region extends from Latitude 8° - 18° S. It conforms to the south-western border of the Amazon region (Figure 1). The entire area is considered to be part of the Amazon for legal and administrative purposes, but in reality, it is located at the junction of the Amazon forest and the Central Brazil savanna region (Figure 2). Rondônia has an area of 0.23 million km2, and the state of Mato Grosso 0.9 million km2, totalling 1.13 million km2 (IBGE, 2011) and representing 13.2 % of the Brazilian territory. A detailed and individualized analysis of its climate, vegetation, geology, geomorphology, and soils can be found in the regional survey reports of the Radam project (Projeto Projeto Radambrasil, 1973-1986).



At a broad regional scale, the studied area consists of two stepped land surfaces with significant vertical separation, which is the result of successive cycles of erosion (King, 1956; King, 1962). Extensive tablelands (called Chapadas) and plateaus with elevation ranging from 800 to 1200 m in the sedimentary Phanerozoic Paraná Basin and Parecis Basin cover much of central and southern Mato Grosso and extend to the northeastern part of Rondônia. Exposed rocks are generally Cretaceous sandstone. Folded rocks consisting of interbedded layers of schist, quartzite, and metacarbonate rocks from the Pre-Cambrian Brazilian (i.e., Neoproterozoic) orogenic belt (i.e., Paraguay-Araguaia Belt) are exposed between the Parecis and Paraná basins and along their eastern borders. The central and northern Rondônia and northern Mato Grosso plains and hills form a complex mosaic of peneplain surfaces interspersed with rocky hills, including a range of steep sandstone hills that are remnants of the Precambrian clastic covers of the Brazilian shield.

The Precambrian Guapore shield is exposed to the north in a western depression along the Guaporé-Mamoré-Madeira Rivers. Yet, in the south of Mato Grosso state, an extensive Holocene alluvial plain, the "Pantanal", shares the border with Bolivia along the Paraguay River. To the east, a flat plain covered by Cenozoic Deposits (Araguaia formation) and eastward by Holocene alluvial deposits, extends along the Araguaia River.

Annual rainfall varies between 1250 and 2000 mm. The northwest has a more humid climate with a 9 to 10 month wet season and a mean temperature of over 23.5 °C. This climate shifts into a drier tropical seasonal climate in the southern and south-eastern parts with 1250 to 1500 mm precipitation, a 6 to 8 months wet season with an average monthly temperature of over 23.5 °C and a dry period from May through September.

Native vegetation cover ranged from: evergreen to semi-evergreen and almost evergreen seasonal forests; semi-deciduous and deciduous seasonal forests; wetland savannas and dry savannas (called "Cerrados" in Brazil); and tropical swamp (Figure 2). Throughout its range, Cerrado vegetation varied from treeless grassland ("campo limpo") to a tall closed forest (called "Cerradão").

Sources and basic information

Spatial data were extracted from SEPLAN-RO (1998) and SEPLAN-MT (2002) as sets of digital files that included hypsometry, geology, geomorphology, hydrography, vegetation, and soil maps at scales of 1:250000 and 1:500000.

For Mato Grosso, a single soil layer was derived by assembling 66 soil maps (1:250000 scale). Because most of the soil units of each map were similarly named but differed in terms of soil content, all units were maintained and coded as defined in the original source map. The soil components of each map unit were characterized by their texture, vegetation, slope class attributes, and Brazilian taxonomic type, which is a member of a hierarchical system with a Great group name and additional characteristics, such as color and base saturations (Projeto Radambrasil, 1973-1986).

For Rondônia, the study used a single map (Cochrane and Cochrane, 1998; SEPLAN-RO, 1998), which provided spatial units delineated on Landsat-5 TM satellite images at the 1:250000 scale. They were differentiated by a landform type comprised of various topographic elements that were characterized by one soil association. A Brazilian taxonomic classification of the soil components and their relative proportions in the associations were available from digital tables (SEPLAN-RO, 1998). Texture, slope, and vegetation parameters were not directly referenced. Slope and vegetation attributes and soil texture were assessed through a soil profile database. It should be noted that on the Rondônia soil map, map units may consist of a relatively large number of soil components.

Delineation of geographic zones (Landscape and Soil Regions)

The landscape regions were first roughly delimited based on geological, geomorphologic, and topographic data (Projeto Radambrasil, 1973-1986; SEPLAN-RO, 1998; SEPLAN-MT, 2002). Their boundaries were then improved by crossing the soil map using a geographic information system (GIS) tool (ESRI ArcGIS 9TM). The polygons of the soil layers were not divided. Additionally, landscape regions were divided into smaller regions, called "soil regions". Soil regions are normally related to variations in the landform or the lithology within the landscape regions, and they were delineated by the same technique used for landscape regions. The validity of the proposed divisions was then verified through extensive field controls along main roads crossing from northern to southern Rondônia and southwest to northeast Mato Grosso and along an east-west transect in northern Rondônia and northern Mato Grosso.

Homogenization of soil map legends

As previously stated, map units of the available soil maps were created as groupings of soil units defined by the soil taxonomic name plus attributes related to the texture phase, vegetation, and slope gradient. On the Mato Grosso maps, all attributes were explicitly marked in the map legend. Attributes were not present in the Rondônia legend but were extracted from additional digital tables (SEPLAN-RO, 1998). For this study's purpose, a single legend was built that included the vegetation and texture phase without the slope gradient. It was assumed that the slope factor would be implicit in the landscape definition. Some of the attributes used in soil taxonomy, such as Ta, Tb (i.e., high activity and low activity clay), or Horizon A types were eliminated because they were considered not to have significance at the regional scale for the studied zone.

A single list of vegetation types was developed summarizing the vegetation classes in the Mato Grosso and Rondônia soil legends. For Rondônia, vegetation types were assigned to the terrain components where the soils are located. The list was greatly simplified; it considered only seven main types of vegetation and excluded all transitional forms. The resulting list of vegetation types identified 28 types; this number is relatively high due to the many associations on the Rondônia map. Soil textures, which were missing from the Rondônia map, were extracted from the soil profile database. They were ascribed to one of the four classes (i.e., sandy, medium, clayey, and heavy clayey textures) defined according to Projeto Radambrasil (1973-1986), using B Horizon B textural analysis result.

Analysis of geographic zone soil content

For each geographic region, all polygons were extracted from soil layers using a GIS tool (ESRI ArcGIS 9TM). Each soil component was reclassified according to the new classification. The areas of each polygon were extracted individually, and they were then summarized for each geographic region. This procedure was applied first by using a complete classification with vegetation attributes and then using a more simplified classification without vegetation attributes. In the text, we use the term "soil unit" to designate soil types characterized by their taxonomic name and the texture of their B horizon without reference to their associated vegetation type.

Results

Landscape regions

Ten landscape regions were delimited based on mean elevation and similarities in land-surface form and geological characteristics (Figure 3; Table 1). The northern Rondônia Peneplain consists of 69 soil units (Table 1). There is no dominant soil unit (Figure 4). The five most represented soil units occupy 50 % of the total region area. Regarding soil cover, the northern Mato Grosso Peneplain is very homogeneous and clearly differentiated from the North Rondônia Peneplain. More than 80 % of the region surface is covered by a single dominant soil unit (Figure 4).



In the northeastern Mato Grosso Peneplain, a single soil unit occupies 50 % of the area. It is associated with 23 other soil units (Table 1). At least five of them are significantly represented (Figure 4). Due to differences in parent rocks, slope and incipient pediment development, soils of the Rondônia and North Mato Grosso Uplands vary considerably, and the total number of soil units is very large at 100 units (Table 1). Note that if a topographic parameter was considered in the definition of the soil units, the number of soil units should be significantly increased in this region because similar soil types will probably occur on both plain surfaces and the slopes of the rounded hills. In addition, there is not one but many dominant soils. The top seven soil units of this region account for only 50 % of the region area (Figure 4). The Parecis Sedimentary Basin is a wide chapada. It has a fairly large number of soil units (65), but it is almost completely covered by five significantly represented soil units (Figure 4).

The Guapore Depression is a very heterogeneous peneplain with 86 soil units (Table 1). None are significantly represented (Figure 4). This can be explained by the large latitudinal extension from the rain forest in the north to the savannas in the south and by the regular occurrence of large areas of poorly drained lowlands. The Araguaia Depression is another heterogeneous region (Figure 4) with similar characteristics; however, there are only two main soil units that are representative of the widespread, poorly drained lowlands of this region.

The Cuiaba Paranatinga Depression region comprises leveled areas in the west, a central mountainous area, and hilly eastern parts, which explains the soil cover complexity (with 86 soil units) and the absence of any clearly prevailing soil types (Figure 4). The Paraná Sedimentary Basin region is a chapada, much like the Parecis Sedimentary Basin region. In this region, the top soil units are not as important as in the Parecis Sedimentary Basin region (Figure 4). This difference is explained by the occurrence of soils developed from exposed underlying Paleozoic layers of the sedimentary basin on eroded parts of the plateau. In the Pantanal Depression, only 2 soil units among the 32 listed account for almost 75 % of the surface (Figure 4).

Overall, the soil cover of a landscape region is usually an association of many soil units. One or several major soil units may characterize a relatively high proportion (up to 75 %) of an area. These top units are associated with a broad range of secondary soil units.

Soil regions

Each landscape region was divided into physiographically homogenous regions, called "soil regions". Twenty-four soil regions were defined (Figure 5; Table 2). Some were designated with the term "pediplain", which has a more restricted definition than the term used for landscape regions. A pediplain is comprised predominantly of coalescing pediment surfaces. It is a land surface with low relief that is widely covered by a residual or transported mantle (King, 1962). For example, landscape regions 1 and 2 were divided according to topography, and region 4 was divided according to topography and lithology. Obviously, the new regions obtained were not perfectly homogeneous, requiring further subdivisions into even smaller regional units. Table 3 lists some characteristics of the soil regions.


Although we expected the soil regions to be more homogenous, this was not the case. There was no significant decrease in the number of soil units in the large landscape regions compared with the smaller soil regions (Tables 1 and 2). A single, largely dominant soil unit was rarely observed, and consequently, several soil units were necessary to cover the majority of a region (Table 4). The finding that three to five top soils characterized the soil cover of a soil region should not have been so common across this entire landscape region. Therefore, the division of landscape regions into soil regions did not considerably decrease the spatial soil variability. At the soil region level, diversity remains high, but soil groups should change considerably.

An additional subdivision of the soil regions did not significantly modify spatial heterogeneity. Soil sub-regions can be defined based on minor variations in rock type, the degree of pediplenation, and/or the incidence of specific soil characteristics such as the occurrence of extensive ferricretes. Similar to the division of landscape regions into soil regions, the number of soil units may decrease, but this is not a general rule. The dominant soil units change only if the soil units are not homogeneously distributed within the regions. As such, some units that rarely appear in a large region become dominant in a smaller region. The decrease occurs mainly for sedimentary inclusions.

Discussion

Based on physiography (including geology, hypsometry, and geomorphology), ten subdivisions were defined as landscape regions. The composition of soil cover and the relative area of the various soil units in the landscape regions were extracted from soil maps at the 1:250000-1:500000 scales; the findings indicate that a single dominant soil unit is found in the northern Mato Grosso Peneplain, which corresponds to more than 80 % of this region's total area. Usually, at least four soil units are required to represent 75 % of an area in relatively homogeneous sedimentary regions, such as the Parecis Plateau or the Pantanal Depression. In other regions, the number of soil units increases significantly. A maximum number is found in the Rondônia and Mato Grosso Uplands regions.

The landscape regions are not homogeneous areas, as some areas may have enough particularities to differentiate them from the dominant attributes that characterize the region. Thus, landscape regions were divided according to specific or secondary characteristics related to topography, geomorphic evolution, or geology. Each region might have had different geomorphic and soil evolution traits as a result of a) its location (e.g., piedmonts bordering depressions), b) pediplenation grade variation, or c) differences in structure and rock types. These sub-regions (i.e., the soil regions) were expected to have less soil variability and, consequently, a smaller range of soil units.

There were 24 soil regions, with areas ranging from 10,000 to 200,000 km2 (Table 2). The soil cover of each soil region consisted of a variety of soil units, the number of which always remained high because the region encompassed several mapping units. A single soil unit may represent more than 75 % of the area, but not as a general rule. Usually, the most common soil had an area that was frequently less than 20 % of the total area; in no case did this value exceed 50 % (Figure 4). There are variable amounts of less common soil units and a very large spectrum of non-representative soil units. Although their individual area is very small, their overall surface cannot be disregarded. There is no simple way to characterize this multiplicity of apparently random occurrences.

The number of soil units does not seem to be related to the size of the area. Comparable spatial heterogeneity was observed at the landscape region and soil region levels. This can be explained by normal soil changes in the landscape along topo-sequences due to slope differentiation (i.e., color and texture differentiations) and by variability in the parent material, which was clearly expressed in crystalline basement areas. In soil regions, soil cover was slightly more homogeneous in terms of the number and hierarchy of soil types. In these cases, there was a more specific spatial arrangement of soil components along with either the emergence or absence of certain prevailing soil types.

Overall, an entire soil region cannot be represented by a single soil unit. In general, soil cover is a set of soil units; the composition of these units can be quantitatively expressed in terms of area (Lin et al., 2005; Phillips and Marion, 2007). Additional subdivisions into smaller zones do not greatly modify spatial heterogeneity (Cerri et al., 2004).

The number of soil units necessary for a satisfactory representation of a regional area of size 10000 to 50000 km2 is normally large, at about four-times to six-times (and sometimes up to ten-fold more) as many units compared to some soil regions. This implies that the spatial characterization of any region, from the highest to the lowest subdivision, requires data pertaining on a variable number of soil types that make up its natural soil cover. This characterization is possible because the number and weight of the relevant soil types can be evaluated (Caniego et al., 2006).

At different spatial levels, various regional soil properties, particularly those related to the definition of the basic soil units (i.e., texture and base saturation), are obtained directly from map data. These properties are assumed to be spatially homogeneous. Soil units can be used such that the spatial estimate of the mean regional soil property is that of their total area-weighted values (Bernoux et al., 2002). However, although they are considered to be spatially homogeneous, these properties vary significantly because the definition of the classes is very broad. For accurate estimates of the properties of each class and the inter-classes comparisons, legend information is not enough. These accurate estimates must be obtained through the statistical analysis of separate sets of selected profiles from the database, which are located in the region and grouped according to the same classification as the soil units (Brejda et al., 2001). Because of the large number of soil units within a region and the broad inner-class spatial variation, a large database is required; however, this is not always available, especially for remote regions (Batjes et al., 2007). Other properties, such as those linked to biological processes, are not explicitly contained within soil maps but are extracted from related databases. As they are spatially very heterogeneous, the variability within a single soil type is usually high and can equal the variability of the whole region (Rasmussen, 2006). Their characterization by a mean value and a defined uncertainty is much more difficult, and it requires a higher number of observations (Laurance et al., 1999; Galbraith et al., 2003; Amichev and Galbraith, 2004; Maia et al., 2009).

As a general rule, the correlation between spatial soil properties and the soil unit is not clearly established. A spatial soil property may extend far beyond the perimeter of a soil unit and overlie several soil units. For this reason, for a number of soil properties and in a certain physiographic and bioclimatic environment, soil units by definition are not the fundamental criteria for spatialization. A new hierarchical classification for soil units must be established for each of these soil properties that wisely uses soil variables to define soil units (Zinn et al., 2005). A good profile database should provide a statistical description of each level of this new classification and allow for an extensive analysis of the correlations with regard to the property of interest (Goidts and van Wesemael, 2007).

Conclusion

In tectonically stable tropical zones, such as the southern edge of the Amazon Basin, the long-term evolution of landforms and soils has generated local and regional heterogeneities that are masked by the relative uniformity of the present bioclimatic environment.

A useful hierarchical classification of land in landscape regions, soil regions, and soil sub-regions can be established based on physiographic factors. This classification is justified because of the direct positive correlation between physiographic factors and the associated soils. The regionalization of the soil data extracted from existing traditional semi-detailed soil maps can serve as a valuable tool for regional-scale environment applications.

The regionalization of the soil units extracted from the soil maps provides a framework for the stratification of spatial soil data using a new hierarchical classification to assess the stratification of the basic soil database. This makes it possible to select the most relevant stratum to study the environment properties of interest.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Fundação de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) projects number 05/59012-1 and 2005/60255-6. We thank Secretaria de Planejamento do Estado de Rondônia (SEPLAN-RO) and Secretaria de Planejamento do Estado do Mato Grosso (SEPLAN-MT) for making available the data from their Zoneamentos Sócio Econômico Ecológicos. We acknowledge CNPq for the fellowship provided to the last author (PQ-1D). We also thank Dr. Martial Bernoux, Dr. Brigitte J. Feigl and Dr. Carlos Clemente Cerri for their comments and suggestions during the work development.

Received October 07, 2010

Accepted January 17, 2012

Edited by: Jussara Borges Regitano / Daniel Scherer de Moura

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  • *
    Corresponding author <
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      06 Mar 2012
    • Date of issue
      June 2012

    History

    • Received
      07 Oct 2010
    • Accepted
      17 Jan 2012
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