TY - JOUR ID - 32008 TI - Statistical and Geostatistical Appraisal of Spatial Variability of Aggregate Stability and Aggregate-Associated Organic Carbon Content on a Catchment Scale in a Semi-arid Region, Central Iran JO - Desert JA - JDESERT LA - en SN - 2008-0875 AU - Motaghian, H.R. AU - Mohammadi, J. AD - PhD. Student, College of Agriculture, Shahrekord University, Shahrekord, Iran AD - Assoc. Prof., College of Agriculture, Shahrekord University, Shahrekord, Iran Y1 - 2012 PY - 2012 VL - 17 IS - 1 SP - 27 EP - 39 KW - Kriging KW - organic matter KW - Variogram KW - Water stable aggregates DO - 10.22059/jdesert.2012.32008 N2 - In a semiarid region of central Iran, effects of parent materials, physiography and landscape position, land use, andmanagement practices on association of organic carbon with secondary (aggregates) particles and aggregate stability canhave important consequences in terms of carbon sequestration and budgeting, deciding on the proper land use strategy andsuitable soil conservation practices. It was used wet sieved aggregates to evaluate the effects of different factors on soilaggregate stability and organic carbon concentration within three aggregate size fractions (>2 mm, 1-2 mm, <1 mm). 111soil samples were collected to measure water stable aggregates (WSA), aggregate organic carbon concentration (OC), andmean weight diameter (MWD). Some other related soil and terrain properties including bulk density, infiltration rate,saturated hydraulic conductivity and erodibility index were also measured. Analyses of variance indicated that waterstability of aggregates was influenced by aggregate size. Higher percentage of water stable aggregates was found formicroaggregates (< 1 mm), followed by mesoaggregates (1 to 2 mm). Aggregate organic carbon content was highest inmesoaggregates (9 g kg-1), followed by microaggregates (7 g kg-1), while the least OC concentration was found inmacroaggregates (3 g kg-1). Both aggregate size fraction and slope aspect significantly impacted aggregate organic carbonconcentration. Although a significant effect of aggregate size on aggregate organic carbon content was found, however,our findings did not support the model of aggregate hierarchy. Both MWD and GMD were significantly impacted byaggregate size fractions. Geostatistical analysis showed that the measured soil attributes exhibited differences in theirspatial patterns in both magnitude and space at each aggregate size fractions. The relative nugget variance for mostaggregate-associated properties was lower than 45%. The range for water stable aggregates was almost similar (3 km)for the three studied aggregate size classes. The range for aggregate-associated organic carbon contents ranged from about3 km for macroaggregates to about 6.5 km for mesoaggregates. Kriged maps of predicted WSA, OC and MWD for thethree studied aggregate size fractions showed clear spatial patterns. However, a close spatial similarity (coregionalization)was observed between WSA and MWD. UR - https://jdesert.ut.ac.ir/article_32008.html L1 - https://jdesert.ut.ac.ir/article_32008_d211bdd05d22e14a450bebc33f298dbe.pdf ER -