Soil type
Soil type refers to a category within systematic classifications of soil that groups together soils sharing similar physical, chemical, and biological properties, enabling their mapping, study, and management for purposes like agriculture and environmental conservation.[1] These properties arise from the interplay of five key soil-forming factors: parent material, climate, living organisms, topography, and time, which influence soil development over millennia.[2] Soil, defined as a natural body composed of solids (minerals and organic matter), liquids, and gases on the land surface, serves as the foundational medium for plant growth, water filtration, and nutrient cycling.[2] Major soil classification systems provide structured frameworks for identifying soil types, with the USDA Soil Taxonomy being a widely used hierarchical system in the United States that divides soils into 12 orders based on diagnostic horizons and properties observable in soil profiles.[3] These orders include Alfisols (moderately weathered, fertile soils with clay accumulation in subsoils, common in humid temperate regions), Andisols (volcanic ash-derived soils rich in organic matter and highly fertile), Aridisols (dry, often saline soils of arid areas with low organic content), Entisols (young, minimally developed soils lacking distinct horizons), Gelisols (permafrost-affected soils in cold climates), Histosols (organic, peat-like soils in wetlands), Inceptisols (young soils with weak horizon development), Mollisols (dark, fertile grassland soils with thick surface horizons), Oxisols (highly weathered, iron-rich tropical soils of low fertility), Spodosols (acidic, leached forest soils), Ultisols (weathered, clay-rich soils of humid regions with low base saturation), and Vertisols (clayey soils that shrink and swell dramatically with moisture changes).[4] Internationally, the World Reference Base (WRB) for Soil Resources, endorsed by the International Union of Soil Sciences, recognizes 32 reference soil groups, emphasizing properties like texture, organic content, and moisture regimes for global applicability.[1] Understanding soil types is crucial for sustainable land use, as they determine water retention, nutrient availability, erosion resistance, and suitability for crops or engineering projects; for instance, sandy Entisols drain quickly but hold few nutrients, while loamy Mollisols support high agricultural productivity.[3] Classification systems like Soil Taxonomy facilitate soil surveys, which map these types to guide conservation practices and predict responses to land management.[5]Definition and Overview
Definition of Soil Type
In soil science, a soil type is a taxonomic unit that groups soils exhibiting a similar range of properties, including morphological, physical, chemical, and biological characteristics, enabling their identification, mapping, and correlation across landscapes.[1] This classification serves as an intermediate level in hierarchical systems, distinguishing it from broader categories like soil orders or classes, which encompass wider variations, and more specific units like soil series, which define highly uniform local occurrences based on detailed profile descriptions.[6] Soil types integrate diagnostic horizons—distinct layers formed through soil-forming processes—and key properties to delineate these groupings, providing a framework for understanding soil distribution and function.[7] Unlike static material compositions, soil types represent dynamic categories that reflect pedogenesis, the suite of processes such as weathering, organic matter accumulation, and translocation of substances that alter parent material over time under the influence of climate, organisms, relief, and parent material.[5] These processes result in characteristic horizon sequences that define the type, emphasizing soils as evolving natural bodies rather than fixed entities. Definitions of soil types may vary slightly across systems, such as the USDA Soil Taxonomy and the World Reference Base for Soil Resources, but all prioritize observable and measurable attributes for consistency.[8][7] For instance, a typical soil profile illustrating a soil type might feature an A horizon at the surface, enriched with organic matter from decaying vegetation; an underlying B horizon showing accumulation of clays or iron oxides translocated from above; and a C horizon transitioning to weathered parent material, with the boundaries and properties of these layers collectively distinguishing the type from others.[9] This delineation highlights how soil types encapsulate the integrated effects of pedogenic development, facilitating applications in agriculture, environmental management, and land-use planning.[1]Historical Development
The concept of distinct soil types emerged in the late 19th century through the foundational work of Russian geologist Vasily Dokuchaev, who established soil science as an independent discipline. In the 1880s, Dokuchaev formulated the zonality theory, positing that soils form zonal patterns closely aligned with climatic gradients and corresponding vegetation, thereby introducing the idea of predictable soil types tied to environmental factors rather than mere agricultural substrates.[10][11] Early 20th-century advancements in the United States built on these ideas with the institutionalization of soil surveys. In 1909, Milton Whitney, as Chief of the USDA Bureau of Soils, published the first national soil map and classification framework, which incorporated "soil types" as the lowest hierarchical level below soil series and provinces, emphasizing texture and crop productivity to guide land use.[12] This system marked a shift toward empirical mapping of soil variability for practical applications. By the 1930s, Curtis Marbut, influenced by Dokuchaev's genetic approach, refined USDA classification by prioritizing soil profile morphology and formation processes, introducing great soil groups that better reflected pedogenic evolution over simplistic textural categories.[12] Following World War II, theoretical frameworks further shaped soil type conceptualization. In 1941, soil scientist Hans Jenny proposed a state factor equation in his seminal book Factors of Soil Formation, quantifying soil development as a function of interacting environmental variables and profoundly influencing subsequent taxonomic systems by underscoring how these factors produce discrete soil categories. The equation is expressed as: S = f(cl, o, r, p, t) where S denotes soil characteristics, cl climate, o biotic organisms, r topographic relief, p parent material, and t time.[13][14] From the 1970s to the 1990s, global collaboration led to standardized international frameworks, diminishing the prominence of "soil type" as a core terminological unit. The USDA's Soil Taxonomy (1975) and the FAO-UNESCO Soil Map of the World (1971–1981) emphasized hierarchical orders and reference groups over granular types, facilitating cross-national correlation while integrating Jenny's factors into broader pedogenic models.[15][16] This era's developments reflected a maturation from regional surveys to a unified science, prioritizing diagnostic horizons for global applicability.[17]Soil Classification Systems
USDA Soil Taxonomy
The USDA Soil Taxonomy is a hierarchical classification system developed by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) for categorizing soils based on their physical, chemical, and morphological properties, primarily to support soil surveys and land management decisions.[3] It organizes soils into six descending levels of increasing specificity: order, suborder, great group, subgroup, family, and series, where the series level represents the most detailed mapping unit and often corresponds to a specific soil type in practical applications.[18] This structure allows for systematic identification by emphasizing diagnostic horizons—distinct soil layers with specific properties—and other attributes like soil moisture and temperature regimes.[8] At the highest level, there are twelve soil orders, each defined by unique combinations of diagnostic horizons and properties that reflect major soil-forming environments.[4] For instance, Mollisols are characterized by a thick, dark, organic-rich mollic epipedon, typically forming under grassland conditions with high base saturation; Alfisols feature an argillic horizon (clay accumulation) and moderate base saturation, common in forested areas; and Ultisols have a clay-enriched subsoil with low base saturation, indicating intense weathering in humid, subtropical climates.[8] The other orders include Andisols (volcanic ash-derived with amorphous minerals), Aridisols (dry soils with aridic moisture regime), Entisols (young, minimally developed soils), Gelisols (permafrost-affected), Histosols (organic-rich), Inceptisols (weakly developed with cambic horizons), Oxisols (highly weathered with oxic horizons), Spodosols (acidic with spodic horizons from podzolization), and Vertisols (clay-rich with shrink-swell properties).[4] These orders are differentiated using criteria such as horizon thickness, color, texture, structure, and reaction (pH), ensuring classifications are based on observable and measurable features rather than inferred processes.[18] The classification process relies on the Keys to Soil Taxonomy, with the 13th edition (2022) providing updated dichotomous keys for field and laboratory identification.[19] Users proceed sequentially through the keys, evaluating soil profiles for the presence of diagnostic horizons (e.g., ochric or umbric epipedons) and regimes like soil moisture (aquic for wet conditions, xeric for Mediterranean climates) and temperature (cryic for cold, hyperthermic for hot).[8] This methodical approach accommodates refinements, such as the 2022 updates to criteria for andic soil properties and gelic materials, enhancing precision for diverse U.S. soils.[8] In the United States, the USDA Soil Taxonomy underpins the National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS), a partnership involving federal, state, and local agencies that has produced detailed soil maps since its formal establishment in 1899, with roots tracing to exploratory surveys in the 1890s.[20] The NCSS uses this taxonomy to generate over 20,000 soil series descriptions and county-level soil surveys, aiding applications in agriculture, conservation, and urban planning across the nation's varied landscapes.[20]World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB)
The World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB) serves as the international standard for soil classification, facilitating the naming of soils and the creation of legends for soil maps worldwide. Endorsed by the International Union of Soil Sciences (IUSS), it provides a common language for soil scientists, enabling global communication and comparison without reliance on national systems. The system emphasizes observable soil properties and horizons to classify soils into reference groups, refined by qualifiers that capture specific characteristics, promoting standardization in soil surveys, research, and policy applications.[7] The WRB originated from the FAO/UNESCO Soil Map of the World project, initiated in the 1960s and completed between 1971 and 1981, which mapped global soils at a 1:5 million scale using 106 soil units. This effort evolved into the first WRB edition in 1998, following international consultations and approval at the 16th World Congress of Soil Science in Montpellier. Subsequent updates—the second edition in 2006, third in 2014, and fourth in 2022—refined definitions based on advances in soil science, with the latest edition incorporating feedback from global experts and presented at the 21st World Congress in Glasgow. Managed by an IUSS working group, the WRB has transitioned from a mapping tool to a dynamic, user-friendly classification system.[7] At its core, the WRB structures soils into 32 Reference Soil Groups (RSGs), each defined by dominant diagnostic horizons, properties, or materials that reflect pedogenic processes. Examples include Luvisols, characterized by clay illuviation in an argic subsurface horizon; Ferralsols, with highly weathered, iron- and aluminum-rich profiles; Histosols, dominated by organic materials; and Andosols, formed from volcanic ejecta with andic properties. Classification proceeds hierarchically: the RSG forms the base name, modified by principal qualifiers (e.g., Gleyic for waterlogged conditions) and supplementary qualifiers (e.g., Calcaric for carbonate presence), such as in "Haplic Luvisol," where "Haplic" denotes a typical expression without additional features. This fourth edition (2022) updates the groups with 281 qualifiers to enhance precision.[7] Diagnostic criteria in the WRB focus on defined horizons, properties, and materials, measured against thresholds like minimum thickness, color, texture, and chemical composition. For instance, the argic horizon in Luvisols requires at least 7.5 cm thickness with evidence of clay translocation, while the mollic horizon in Chernozems demands dark color, ≥0.6% organic carbon, and base saturation below 50%. These criteria prioritize field-observable attributes over laboratory data where possible, ensuring applicability in diverse environments. Specifier prefixes, or qualifiers, further delineate variations, such as "Abruptic" for abrupt textural changes or "Vitric" for glassy volcanic materials.[7] To support interoperability, the WRB includes correlation tools like keys and legends that align its groups with other systems, such as the USDA Soil Taxonomy, where broad equivalences exist—for example, Luvisols often correspond to Alfisols through shared diagnostic horizons like the argic (analogous to argillic). Annexes in the reference document provide crosswalks, texture triangles, and field guides to facilitate translations between classifications.[7]Other National and International Systems
The Australian Soil Classification (ASC), first published in 1998 and updated in its third edition in 2021, organizes soils into 15 orders based on key diagnostic properties such as parent material, color, and structural features like texture and aggregation.[21] Examples include Ferrosols, characterized by iron-rich, red or brown structured clays, and Sodosols, which feature sodic subsoils with abrupt texture contrasts. This system prioritizes observable field attributes to suit Australia's diverse arid and semi-arid landscapes, with the 2021 edition adding the Arenosols order for deep sandy soils. The French Référentiel Pédologique (RP), introduced in 1998 and revised in 2008, defines 110 reference soil types within a framework emphasizing the identification of genetic horizons formed through pedogenic processes like clay illuviation and organic matter accumulation.[22] These are grouped into 34 Grands Ensembles de Références (GERs) and incorporate European-specific qualifiers, such as those for calcic or hydromorphic influences, to address temperate and Mediterranean soil variability.[22] The Chinese Soil Taxonomy (CST), established in 2001 and revised in 2015, classifies soils into 14 orders by integrating pedogenic processes with zonal patterns influenced by climate and vegetation across China's vast latitudinal gradients. Notable orders include Luvisols, marked by argillic horizons in humid subtropical zones, and Red Earths (often under Udic subgroups), reflecting intense weathering in red soil regions.[23] These national systems adapt international frameworks like the WRB by incorporating local climatic adaptations; for instance, the ASC emphasizes texture-contrast soils prevalent in Australia's dry environments, where such profiles map variably to WRB groups like Luvisols or Planosols.[24]Properties Defining Soil Types
Physical Properties
Soil texture refers to the relative proportions of sand, silt, and clay particles in soil, which fundamentally influences its physical behavior and is a primary criterion in soil classification systems.[25] These particle sizes are defined as sand (0.05–2.0 mm), silt (0.002–0.05 mm), and clay (<0.002 mm), and their percentages sum to 100% of the fine-earth fraction (<2 mm).[25] The USDA employs a textural triangle to delineate 12 classes based on these proportions; for example, loam falls within 23–52% sand, 28–50% silt, and 7–27% clay.[25] This classification aids in predicting water movement and root penetration, with coarser textures like sand promoting drainage and finer ones like clay enhancing retention.[26] Soil structure describes the arrangement of soil particles into aggregates or peds, which affects aeration, infiltration, and root growth.[27] Common types include granular (small, rounded peds in surface horizons, promoting high porosity and water infiltration), blocky (cube-like peds in subsoils, balancing porosity with moderate water retention), and platy (flat, layered peds that restrict water flow and reduce porosity).[27] These structures form through pedogenic processes involving wetting-drying cycles and organic matter binding, directly impacting total pore space and hydraulic conductivity.[27] Bulk density quantifies soil compactness as the dry mass per unit volume, calculated by \rho_b = \frac{m}{V}, where m is the oven-dry mass and V is the total volume including pores.[28] Typical values range from 1.0 to 1.6 g/cm³, with lower densities in organic-rich soils and higher in compacted ones.[28] Porosity, the volume of pore space, is derived as \phi = 1 - \frac{\rho_b}{\rho_p}, assuming a particle density \rho_p of approximately 2.65 g/cm³ for mineral soils; this yields porosities of 30–60%, where coarser structures increase macropores for drainage while finer ones enhance micropores for retention. Soil color, assessed using the Munsell system, provides insights into horizon composition through hue (color name), value (lightness), and chroma (saturation); for instance, dark hues (low value, e.g., 10YR 3/1) indicate organic-rich A horizons, while reddish hues signal iron oxidation in B horizons.[25] Consistence evaluates soil resistance to deformation across moisture states, with wet consistence specifically rated by plasticity (nonplastic to very plastic, based on ribbon-forming ability) and stickiness (nonsticky to very sticky, based on adhesion to fingers).[25] These ratings, performed on puddled soil, reflect clay content and mineralogy, influencing tillage and erosion potential.[25]Chemical Properties
Chemical properties of soil play a pivotal role in determining fertility, nutrient dynamics, and reactivity, influencing how soils are classified and managed across taxonomic systems. These properties encompass pH levels, cation exchange capacity, organic matter content, and salinity or sodicity, each affecting ion availability and plant uptake in distinct ways. Variations in these characteristics arise from pedogenic processes and environmental factors, enabling differentiation of soil types such as acidic Ultisols from alkaline Aridisols. Soil pH, a measure of hydrogen ion concentration, typically ranges from 3.5 to 9.0 in natural soils, with values below 6.5 often classifying soils as acidic and above 7.5 as alkaline. Acidic conditions (pH < 6.5) limit phosphorus availability by promoting fixation with iron and aluminum, reducing uptake for crops like corn and soybeans. Optimal pH for most nutrients falls between 6.0 and 7.5, where macronutrients such as nitrogen and potassium are most accessible, while extreme pH values diminish micronutrient solubility, such as iron and manganese in alkaline soils.[29][30][31] Cation exchange capacity (CEC) quantifies a soil's ability to retain and exchange positively charged ions (cations) like calcium, magnesium, and potassium, measured as the sum of exchangeable cations in milliequivalents per 100 grams of soil (meq/100g). Typical CEC values range from 5 meq/100g in sandy soils to 50 meq/100g in clay-rich soils, reflecting the negative charge sites on clay minerals and organic matter that bind nutrients against leaching. Higher CEC enhances fertility by buffering against pH fluctuations and maintaining nutrient reserves, crucial for distinguishing high-fertility Mollisols from low-CEC Entisols. Clay particles contribute disproportionately to CEC due to their surface area, often accounting for over 80% of the capacity in fine-textured soils.[32][33][34] Organic matter content, comprising 1-10% of most agricultural soils, drives humus formation through the stabilization of partially decomposed plant and animal residues into amorphous, nutrient-rich complexes. Humus improves soil structure and nutrient retention, with its formation relying on microbial decomposition that mineralizes carbon and releases essential elements like nitrogen. A simplified representation of aerobic microbial breakdown is the respiration equation: \text{C}_6\text{H}_{12}\text{O}_6 + 6\text{O}_2 \rightarrow 6\text{CO}_2 + 6\text{H}_2\text{O} This process converts simple sugars from organic inputs into stable humus, enhancing CEC by up to 200 meq/100g per percent of organic matter added. Soils with low organic matter (<2%), such as in arid regions, exhibit reduced fertility and slower nutrient cycling compared to humus-rich Chernozems.[35][36][37] Salinity refers to elevated soluble salt concentrations, assessed by electrical conductivity (EC) of the saturation extract, with values exceeding 4 dS/m indicating saline soils that impair root function and osmotic balance in plants. Sodicity, characterized by high sodium relative to calcium and magnesium, is quantified by the sodium adsorption ratio (SAR), calculated as: \text{SAR} = \frac{\text{Na}^+}{\sqrt{(\text{Ca}^{2+} + \text{Mg}^{2+})/2}} where concentrations are in meq/L; SAR values above 13 signal sodic conditions, leading to clay dispersion and poor permeability in soils like Natrargids. Saline-sodic soils combine high EC (>4 dS/m) and SAR (>13), exacerbating erosion and reducing agricultural productivity in irrigated arid zones. Management often involves gypsum amendments to lower SAR and improve infiltration.[38][39][40]Biological Properties
Biological properties of soil encompass the living organisms and their activities that influence soil type classification, particularly in organic-rich soils like Histosols, where biotic processes drive decomposition and nutrient dynamics.[41] Microbial biomass, primarily consisting of bacteria, fungi, and actinomycetes, forms the foundational component of soil biota, with bacteria dominating in mineral soils and fungi prevailing in organic horizons.[42] These microorganisms contribute to soil type differentiation by mediating organic matter breakdown, with bacterial biomass often increasing under elevated CO2 conditions by about 9.1% and fungal biomass by 11%.[42] Actinomycetes, known for their role in humus formation, thrive in neutral to alkaline conditions and enhance soil structure through filament production.[43] Microbial activity is commonly assessed through basal respiration rates, which measure CO2 evolution as an indicator of metabolic function, typically ranging from 10 to 100 µg CO2 per gram of soil per day in undisturbed ecosystems.[44] In prairie soils, for instance, respiration can reach 280 µg C g⁻¹ day⁻¹, reflecting high microbial efficiency in carbon turnover. These rates vary by soil type, with higher values in fertile, organic-amended soils supporting greater biomass and influencing classifications like Mollisols.[44] Fungi-to-bacteria ratios, often elevated in acidic or organic soils, further distinguish types such as Spodosols, where fungal dominance aids in lignin decomposition.[43] Soil fauna, including earthworms and nematodes, play crucial roles in aggregation and burrowing, which affect soil aeration and water infiltration, thereby contributing to type-specific structures in soils like Vertisols.[45] Earthworms enhance multifunctionality by promoting bacterial communities and biotic interactions, increasing aggregate stability through casting and burrowing activities that can redistribute organic matter up to 10 cm deep. Nematodes, as both herbivores and predators, influence microbial populations and nutrient availability, with burrowing species improving pore connectivity in compacted soils.[45] Biodiversity within these communities is quantified using indices like the Shannon diversity, which measures species evenness and richness; values typically range from 1.5 to 3.0 in healthy forest soils, declining under disturbance and altering soil type resilience.[46] Higher Shannon indices correlate with improved soil health in diverse ecosystems, such as agroforestry systems.[47] The development of the organic (O) horizon is a key biological feature in soil types with high organic content, where thickness varies from 1-2 cm in thin forest litter to over 10 cm in wetland Histosols, reflecting accumulation of undecomposed plant residues.[48] Humification progresses through stages from fibric (least decomposed, >90% recognizable fibers) to hemic (intermediate) and sapric (highly decomposed, <17% fibers), driven by microbial and faunal activity that transforms litter into stable humus.[49] In fibric stages, common in early-successional or cold soils, decomposition is slow due to low microbial access; sapric stages dominate in well-drained, biologically active profiles like those in Alfisols.[50] O horizon thickness exceeding 40 cm often defines organic soil orders, with humification extent influencing water retention and classification boundaries.[25] Enzyme activities, such as dehydrogenase, serve as proxies for overall microbial metabolism and soil health, particularly in organic soils where they indicate oxidative processes.[41] Dehydrogenase, an intracellular enzyme linked to respiration, shows two- to sevenfold higher activity in cropped Histosols compared to uncultivated ones, reflecting enhanced metabolic rates under vegetation.[41] In Histosols, these activities correlate with organic matter decomposition, with levels up to 50 µg TPF g⁻¹ soil h⁻¹ signaling robust health and distinguishing them from mineral-dominant types.[41] Such enzymes underscore biotic contributions to nutrient cycling, including microbial mediation of pH buffering through organic acid production.[51]Soil Formation and Influencing Factors
Pedogenic Processes
Pedogenic processes are the fundamental mechanisms that drive soil formation, involving the addition, removal, alteration, and movement of materials within the soil profile to create distinct horizons and properties characteristic of different soil types. These processes operate over time on parent materials, resulting in the genetic development of soils as classified in systems like the USDA Soil Taxonomy. The four primary categories—additions, losses, transformations, and translocations—interact dynamically to shape soil composition and structure.[52][18] Additions introduce new materials to the soil, enhancing its fertility and texture. Organic matter input from decomposing plant residues and microbial activity contributes to humus formation, improving soil aggregation and nutrient cycling. Mineral deposition, such as wind-blown dust accumulating as loess in regions like the Great Plains, adds fine silt particles that serve as parent material for further pedogenesis. These inputs are essential for initiating soil development in barren landscapes.[52] Losses involve the removal of soluble components, often through leaching by percolating water, which depletes nutrients and alters soil chemistry. In humid climates, bases like calcium and magnesium are leached from upper horizons, leading to acidic conditions and the formation of Ultisols with low base saturation. This process can be illustrated by cation exchange, where hydrogen ions displace base cations into solution for subsequent removal: (\text{soil})_2\text{Ca}^{2+} + 2\text{H}^{+} \rightarrow 2(\text{soil})\text{H}^{+} + \text{Ca}^{2+}_{(aq)} [53]Such losses promote the dominance of low-activity clays and iron oxides in the subsoil.[52] Transformations modify existing materials through chemical reactions, breaking down primary minerals into secondary ones and influencing soil mineralogy. Weathering of feldspars, common in granitic parent materials, produces clays like kaolinite via hydrolysis; for orthoclase feldspar, the reaction is: $2\text{KAlSi}_3\text{O}_8 + 2\text{H}^+ + 9\text{H}_2\text{O} \rightarrow \text{Al}_2\text{Si}_2\text{O}_5(\text{OH})_4 + 2\text{K}^+ + 4\text{H}_4\text{SiO}_4 This incongruent dissolution releases soluble silica and potassium while forming stable clay minerals that enhance soil retention capacity. Additionally, oxidation and reduction processes in fluctuating water tables create redoximorphic features, such as iron mottles and depletions, where Fe³⁺ reduces to Fe²⁺ under anaerobic conditions and reoxidizes upon drainage, producing distinctive soil colors and structures.[54][55] Translocations entail the downward or lateral movement of particles and solutes, concentrating them in lower horizons. Illuviation of fine clays suspended in soil water leads to the accumulation in subsoils, forming argillic horizons in Alfisols, where clay content increases markedly below eluvial zones due to deposition and orientation along pore walls. This process, driven by water percolation, distinguishes soils with structured B horizons from those lacking such illuvial features.[18][56] These pedogenic processes collectively determine soil type development, with rates influenced by external factors such as climate that accelerate or inhibit reactions like leaching and weathering.