USDA soil taxonomy
USDA Soil Taxonomy is a hierarchical classification system for soils developed and maintained by the United States Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). It organizes soils into categories based on observable and measurable properties, including morphology, chemistry, physics, and mineralogy, to facilitate the making and interpreting of soil surveys for agriculture, conservation, land use planning, and research.[1] The system provides a standardized framework for communicating soil relationships, projecting soil behavior across regions, and correlating soils globally, drawing on contributions from thousands of pedologists worldwide.[2] The taxonomy's development traces back to early 20th-century efforts influenced by the Russian soil scientist Vasily Dokuchaev and evolved through U.S. systems like the 1938 classification. A pivotal advancement came with the 7th Approximation in 1960, led by Guy D. Smith, which laid the groundwork for the modern system by emphasizing diagnostic horizons and properties over genetic origins. The first formal edition of Soil Taxonomy: A Basic System of Soil Classification for Making and Interpreting Soil Surveys was published in 1975 by the USDA Soil Conservation Service, initially recognizing 10 soil orders. The second edition, released in 1999 as USDA Handbook 436, expanded to 12 orders by adding Andisols (soils dominated by volcanic materials) and Gelisols (permafrost-affected soils), while refining definitions for low-activity clays, aquic conditions, and family criteria.[2] Ongoing updates occur through the Keys to Soil Taxonomy, a companion diagnostic manual, with the 13th edition published in 2022 to incorporate recent scientific advances and ensure field applicability.[3] At its core, the system employs a six-level hierarchy, from broadest to most specific: orders, suborders, great groups, subgroups, families, and series. There are 12 orders, each named to reflect major soil-forming processes or environments—Alfisols, Andisols, Aridisols, Entisols, Gelisols, Histosols, Inceptisols, Mollisols, Oxisols, Spodosols, Ultisols, and Vertisols—further subdivided into 64 suborders, over 300 great groups, more than 2,400 subgroups, numerous families (based on particle size, mineralogy, and temperature/moisture regimes), and more than 20,000 series in the United States alone, often named after geographic locations.[2][4] This structure uses connotative nomenclature to aid memory of soil properties and supports the National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS), which maps and interprets soils across the U.S. and territories. The taxonomy integrates with international efforts, such as the FAO-UNESCO Soil Map of the World, promoting consistent global soil classification.[1]Introduction
Overview
The USDA Soil Taxonomy is the official soil classification system developed by the United States Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) for use in the National Cooperative Soil Survey.[2] It provides a standardized framework for identifying and categorizing soils based on their observable and measurable characteristics, facilitating consistent soil surveys, mapping, and land management decisions across the United States.[2] At its core, the system classifies soils according to diagnostic horizons, soil properties, and environmental regimes, rather than relying on presumed origins, genetic processes, or associated vegetation.[2] This approach emphasizes empirical evidence from soil morphology, chemistry, and physics, treating soils as dynamic natural bodies influenced by factors such as climate, organisms, relief, parent material, and time.[2] The fundamental unit of classification is the pedon, defined as a three-dimensional soil body that represents the smallest volume exhibiting the full range of soil properties and processes.[2] Established to promote uniformity in soil surveys, Soil Taxonomy enables precise interpretation of soil behavior for agriculture, conservation, and engineering, supporting applications from detailed local mapping to broad national inventories.[2] Updates to the system, such as the 13th edition of the Keys to Soil Taxonomy published in 2022, incorporate recent scientific advances.[3]Purpose and Applications
The USDA Soil Taxonomy serves as a foundational system for classifying soils based on their observable and measurable properties, primarily to facilitate the making and interpreting of soil surveys. Its core purpose is to establish hierarchical classes that enable soil scientists and land managers to understand relationships among soils, predict their behavior under various management practices, and communicate soil concepts effectively across regions and disciplines. This classification supports agricultural productivity assessments by identifying key soil attributes like texture, drainage, and fertility, which inform decisions on crop selection and yield potential. Additionally, it aids environmental management by delineating areas prone to erosion or suitable for conservation practices, and it underpins ecological studies by linking soil types to ecosystem functions and biodiversity. In practical applications, Soil Taxonomy is integral to USDA soil mapping efforts, such as those accessible through the Web Soil Survey tool, which provides detailed maps and reports for general farm planning, local development, and broader regional assessments.[5] For instance, it enables crop suitability recommendations by correlating taxonomic classes with plant growth requirements, helping farmers optimize irrigation, fertilization, and tillage. In erosion control, the system identifies highly erodible soils through diagnostic features like slope and texture, guiding the implementation of conservation measures to prevent degradation. Similarly, it plays a key role in wetland delineation by classifying hydric soils—those with indicators of saturation and reduction—essential for regulatory compliance and restoration projects under programs like the Wetland Reserve Program.[2] The taxonomy also supports policy decisions in conservation programs, where soil surveys based on its criteria help determine eligibility for financial assistance in sustainable land management.[6] By enabling predictions of soil responses to climate, land use changes, and treatments, it informs strategies for maintaining soil health and resilience. Soil Taxonomy contributes to interpreting land capability classes, a related USDA system that groups soils into categories (I through VIII) based on limitations for farming and forestry; Class I soils, with few restrictions, are ideal for intensive cultivation, while higher classes require specialized management to avoid damage.[7]Historical Development
Origins and Early Classifications
The origins of USDA soil taxonomy trace back to the late 19th century with the establishment of systematic soil surveys under the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Division of Soils. In 1894, Milton Whitney was appointed as the first Chief of the Division of Agricultural Soils, where he initiated the National Cooperative Soil Survey program in 1896 to map and classify soils based primarily on texture, agricultural productivity, and geological origins.[8] These early efforts were influenced by European agricultural chemistry and geology, but they lacked a comprehensive pedological framework until Russian concepts of soil zonality—developed by Vasily Dokuchaev in the 1880s—began to shape American soil science. Dokuchaev's emphasis on soils as independent natural bodies formed under bioclimatic influences was introduced to the U.S. through translations by Konstantin Glinka, which Curtis F. Marbut encountered during his studies abroad.[8] By the early 20th century, Marbut, who succeeded Whitney as Chief Soil Scientist in 1910, adapted these Russian ideas into the first major U.S. soil classification system. Marbut's approach focused on soil profiles, morphology, and genetic processes tied to climate and vegetation, culminating in his 1935 outline and the USDA's 1938 publication Soils and Men, which formalized a zonal-intrazonal-azonal hierarchy.[8] In this system, zonal soils (e.g., chernozems in prairie regions) reflected dominant climate-vegetation zones, intrazonal soils showed local modifications like wet depressions, and azonal soils lacked horizon development due to youth or parent material dominance.[8] However, this genetic classification proved limited for detailed mapping and international correlation, as it prioritized inferred origins over observable properties and struggled with diverse non-agricultural applications.[8] Post-World War II advancements in soil science highlighted these shortcomings, prompting a shift toward a diagnostic, properties-based taxonomy in the 1950s. Guy D. Smith, Director of Soil Survey Investigations at the USDA Soil Conservation Service, led this transition starting in 1951, when the agency decided to develop a new system emphasizing measurable soil characteristics like horizons, moisture, and temperature regimes.[9] Smith's efforts involved releasing seven iterative "approximations" for testing by soil scientists, incorporating feedback to address gaps in earlier systems, such as handling tropical and permafrost soils.[9] This work was formalized through cooperative international efforts, including collaboration with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, which ensured broader applicability and alignment with global pedological standards.[9]Key Publications and Editions
The development of USDA Soil Taxonomy was preceded by the publication of Soil Classification: A Comprehensive System, 7th Approximation in 1960, which served as a foundational precursor document outlining a diagnostic approach to soil classification and was influenced by international discussions at the 1960 International Society of Soil Science Congress in Madison, Wisconsin, where collaboration on a global soil legend was initiated.[10][11] The first formal edition, Soil Taxonomy: A Basic System of Soil Classification for Making and Interpreting Soil Surveys, was published in 1975 under the leadership of Guy D. Smith, establishing the hierarchical framework with 10 soil orders and diagnostic criteria for soil surveys.[12] The second edition of Soil Taxonomy appeared in 1999, authored by the Soil Survey Staff, incorporating refinements to diagnostic horizons, soil moisture and temperature regimes, and family-level criteria based on two decades of field application and international input from commissions like ICOMFAM, and adding two new soil orders, Andisols and Gelisols.[1] No major new edition of Soil Taxonomy has been released since 1999, but the companion Keys to Soil Taxonomy—which provides updated diagnostic keys for field classification—has been revised regularly to address emerging data and minor adjustments.[3][13] The 13th edition of Keys to Soil Taxonomy, published in 2022, includes refinements such as updated thresholds for andic properties (e.g., phosphate retention ≥85% or ≥25%, with specific aluminum and iron oxide criteria) and revisions to the gelic soil temperature regime for permafrost soils (defining Hypergelic as ≤-10°C mean annual temperature, with enhanced criteria for gelic materials showing cryoturbation within 100 cm of the surface).[13] These annual updates to the Keys ensure the system's stability, with no substantive changes to the 12 soil orders as of 2025, allowing consistent application in soil surveys while incorporating feedback from national conferences and international collaborations.[3][13]Classification Framework
Hierarchical Levels
The USDA Soil Taxonomy employs a hierarchical classification system consisting of six descending categorical levels, designed to progressively refine soil groupings based on observable and measurable properties, from broad environmental and formative characteristics to detailed local variations suitable for mapping and management. This structure allows for the systematic organization of soils into increasingly specific taxa, facilitating communication, prediction of soil behavior, and practical applications in agriculture, conservation, and land-use planning.[13] At the highest level, the order represents the broadest category, encompassing 12 classes that delineate major soil groups primarily distinguished by the presence or absence of key formative processes and diagnostic features. Orders provide the foundational grouping, capturing global patterns of soil development influenced by factors such as climate and geology.[13] The suborder level refines orders by incorporating modifiers that account for environmental regimes, such as moisture and temperature, resulting in 64 suborders across the system. This level adds nuance to the order classification by highlighting regional variations in soil-forming conditions.[13] Next, the great group further subdivides suborders based on specific diagnostic attributes, yielding over 300 great groups. It emphasizes particular soil characteristics that define subgroups within the environmental context established at higher levels.[13] The subgroup category introduces variations within great groups, including typical (typic), intergrade (to other groups), and extragrade (unusual) types, with more than 2,400 subgroups identified. This level accommodates transitional or atypical soils, enhancing the system's flexibility for diverse profiles.[13] At the family level, classification shifts toward practical groupings defined by physical and chemical properties, such as particle-size class, mineralogy, and soil temperature regime, comprising thousands of families. Families bridge higher conceptual categories with field-applicable units, aiding in soil management interpretations.[13] The series constitutes the lowest and most specific taxonomic level, representing named soil types as the basic mapping units in soil surveys, with more than 20,000 officially recognized series in the United States. Each series describes a unique combination of properties within a family, correlated to local landscapes and used for detailed soil mapping and productivity assessments.[4] Underlying this hierarchy are two fundamental concepts: the pedon, defined as the smallest three-dimensional volume of soil that can be described and sampled to represent its properties (typically 1 to 10 square meters in area and extending to the depth of genetic horizons), and the polypedon, a laterally continuous group of similar pedons forming a soil individual suitable as a map unit. Pedons serve as the basis for individual soil profile classification, while polypedons enable practical delineation in surveys.[13]Naming Conventions
The USDA Soil Taxonomy employs a systematic nomenclature that uses Latin and Greek roots, prefixes, and suffixes to denote key soil characteristics, environmental regimes, and hierarchical positions, facilitating memorability and international communication among soil scientists. This connotative system builds upon the six taxonomic levels—orders, suborders, great groups, subgroups, families, and series—outlined in the classification framework.[13][14] At the order level, names are formed by combining a formative element derived from soil properties with the suffix "-sol," reflecting major diagnostic horizons or formation processes; for instance, Alfisol derives from "al" (aluminum) and "f" (iron), highlighting the accumulation of these elements in the subsoil. Other examples include Mollisol (from Latin "mollis," meaning soft, for the dark, friable surface horizon) and Ultisol (from Latin "ultimus," meaning last, indicating highly weathered end-stage soils). There are twelve such orders, each with unique etymological roots tied to pedogenic features.[14] Suborder names append a prefix—typically two or three syllables, often two letters in abbreviated form—to the order name, primarily indicating moisture or temperature regimes; common prefixes include "ust-" for ustic (semiarid to subhumid) conditions and "ud-" for udic (humid). For example, in the Alfisol order, Udalf denotes Alfisols under udic moisture regimes. These prefixes standardize subdivisions within orders, with 64 suborders recognized across the taxonomy.[13][14] Great group names further refine classification by adding a prefix to the suborder name, where the resulting suffix highlights central diagnostic features such as horizon types or mineralogy; for Alfisols with udic moisture, the great group suffix becomes "-udalf," as in Hapludalf (from Greek "haplos," meaning simple, for minimally expressed properties). This level encompasses over 300 great groups, emphasizing key pedogenic attributes without altering the order-specific ending.[13] Family-level nomenclature incorporates the higher categories with appended descriptors for particle-size classes (e.g., "fine-loamy" for soils with 35-50% clay in the subsoil), mineralogy (e.g., "mixed" for diverse minerals), and soil temperature or moisture regimes (e.g., "mesic" for moderate temperatures of 8-15°C). An example is the fine-loamy, mixed, mesic family within a Hapludalf great group, providing quantitative distinctions for soil behavior in mapping and management.[13][14] The series level, the most specific category used in soil surveys, assigns unique names inspired by nearby geographic features, such as towns, rivers, or landforms, rather than systematic roots; the Cecil series, for instance, is named after Cecil County in Maryland but predominantly occurs in North Carolina. As of 2025, the Official Series Descriptions database maintains more than 20,000 such series, serving as the practical mapping units for U.S. soils.[4]Diagnostic Properties and Criteria
Soil Horizons and Features
In USDA soil taxonomy, soil horizons and features are fundamental morphological elements that define the diagnostic properties used for classification. These are identified through field observations and laboratory analyses of a pedon, defined as a three-dimensional body of soil with its own set of properties extending from the surface to bedrock or a depth of 2 meters, typically encompassing a minimum area of 1 m² to ensure representativeness. Horizons are designated by master letters—O for organic layers, A for mineral surface horizons often enriched with organic matter, E for eluvial (leached) horizons, B for subsurface horizons showing accumulation or alteration, C for relatively unaltered parent material, and R for bedrock—each characterized by quantifiable attributes such as thickness, structure (e.g., granular, blocky, or prismatic), texture, and color using the Munsell soil color chart. These designations facilitate the description of vertical soil profiles and highlight pedogenic processes like weathering, leaching, and illuviation.[13][15] Diagnostic surface horizons, or epipedons, occur at or near the soil surface and indicate organic enrichment or human influence. The mollic epipedon is a thick, dark, base-saturated horizon with high organic carbon content (typically ≥0.6%), low chroma (≤3 moist), and value ≤3 moist on the Munsell scale, requiring a minimum thickness of 10–25 cm depending on texture and moisture conditions. The umbric epipedon shares similar color and organic criteria but has lower base saturation (<50%), distinguishing it in more acidic environments. Other surface diagnostics include the anthropic epipedon, formed from human-transported materials with artifacts; the plaggen epipedon, a human-amended layer ≥30 cm thick resulting from long-term manure or sod applications, with organic carbon ≥0.6%; and the histic epipedon, an organic-rich layer ≥20 cm thick under saturated conditions or ≥10 cm if drained. These epipedons must meet moisture and temperature thresholds for formation, such as being moist for ≥90 days per year at ≥5°C.[13] Subsurface diagnostic horizons reflect deeper pedogenic alterations below the epipedon. The argillic horizon features illuvial clay accumulation, evidenced by clay films or an absolute increase of at least 3% clay if the eluvial horizon has less than 15% clay, at least 1.2 times the eluvial clay content if 15–40% clay, or at least 8% absolute increase if more than 40% clay, with a minimum thickness of 7.5–15 cm. The spodic horizon is marked by illuviation of organic matter, aluminum, and iron, showing reddish hues (5YR or redder), low chroma (≤3 moist), and specific chemical thresholds like optical density of oxalic extract plus pyrophosphate (ODOE) ≥0.25, with thicknesses ranging from 2.5–18 cm and bulk density ≤1.0 g/cm³. The cambic horizon represents early-stage alteration without strong illuviation, requiring ≥15 cm thickness, evidence of structure development or color changes (e.g., hue 7.5YR or redder with chroma ≥2), and exclusion of unaltered parent materials; the 2022 edition updated these criteria to better emphasize pedogenic evidence over mere color shifts. The kandic horizon, a clay-enriched layer with low-activity clays, lacks an illuviation requirement but shows a clay increase and upper boundary <100 cm from the surface.[13] Beyond horizons, other diagnostic features include human-altered layers and indicators of wetland conditions. The plaggen feature is a subsurface equivalent to the plaggen epipedon, comprising ≥30–50 cm of manure-amended material on slopes <25%, often with high organic content and identifiable by its anthropogenic origin. Hydric soil indicators denote prolonged saturation and reducing conditions, such as redoximorphic features (e.g., depletions with chroma ≤2 on the Munsell scale) or gleyed matrices, requiring saturation for ≥20 consecutive days or ≥30 cumulative days in the growing season within 40–100 cm of the surface. These features are assessed through profile examination to a depth of 2 meters or until bedrock, integrating color, structure, and textural data to confirm diagnostic status.[13][16]| Diagnostic Horizon | Key Properties | Minimum Thickness (cm) | Munsell Color Criteria (Moist) | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mollic Epipedon | High base saturation (≥50%), organic C ≥0.6% | 10–25 (texture-dependent) | Value ≤3, chroma ≤3 | [13] |
| Umbric Epipedon | Low base saturation (<50%), organic C ≥0.6% | 10–25 (texture-dependent) | Value ≤3, chroma ≤3 | [13] |
| Argillic Horizon | Illuvial clay films, clay increase: ≥3% if eluvial <15% clay, ≥1.2× if 15–40%, ≥8% if >40% | 7.5–15 | Varies | [13] |
| Spodic Horizon | Illuvial Al/Fe/organics, ODOE ≥0.25 | 2.5–18 | Hue 5YR or redder, chroma ≤3 | [13] |
| Cambic Horizon | Structure/color alteration, no strong illuviation | ≥15 | Hue 7.5YR or redder, chroma ≥2 | [13] |
Soil Temperature Regimes
Soil temperature regimes in the USDA Soil Taxonomy classify soils according to their mean annual soil temperature (MAST) and, in some cases, seasonal variations, providing a key diagnostic criterion for taxonomic placement at the suborder level and below.[13] These regimes reflect the thermal environment that influences pedogenic processes, such as weathering rates and biological activity.[2] MAST is determined by measuring soil temperature at a depth of 50 cm below the surface under bare soil conditions, excluding influences from vegetation, snow, mulch, or irrigation; if a root-limiting layer (e.g., densic, lithic, or paralithic contact) occurs shallower than 50 cm, the measurement is taken at that depth.[13] In recent soil surveys, adjustments are applied for urban heat island effects, which can elevate MAST by up to 2°C, by comparing to nearby non-urban reference sites or local climate data.[2] The primary soil temperature regimes are defined as follows, based on MAST and additional criteria where applicable:| Regime | MAST Range (°C) | Additional Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Pergelic | < 0 | Permafrost within 100 cm of the surface; continuous permafrost or mean annual temperature at 50 cm ≤0°C. |
| Cryic | 0–8 | Mean summer soil temperature (MSST) <15°C; either soil temperature <5°C for at least 30 consecutive days or MSST minus mean winter soil temperature >6°C. |
| Frigid | 0–8 | MSST ≥15°C; soil temperature >5°C for fewer than 30 consecutive days or MSST minus mean winter soil temperature ≤6°C (distinguishing from cryic). |
| Mesic | 8–15 | MSST typically <22°C; seasonal difference (MSST minus mean winter) >6°C in non-isothermic cases. |
| Thermic | 15–22 | MSST typically <28°C; seasonal difference >6°C in non-isothermic cases. |
| Hyperthermic | >22 | MSST often >22°C; seasonal difference >6°C in non-isothermic cases. |
Soil Moisture Regimes
Soil moisture regimes in USDA Soil Taxonomy classify soils based on the duration and distribution of periods when water is available to plants, reflecting the balance between precipitation and potential evapotranspiration in the soil moisture control section.[14] These regimes are determined for normal years without irrigation or fallowing, using the moisture control section—typically 10 to 30 cm thick in the upper solum where moisture status is evaluated at tensions below 1,500 kPa (moist) or above (dry).[2] The assessment considers soil temperature thresholds, such as greater than 5°C at 50 cm depth for defining dry periods in aridic and torric regimes, or greater than 8°C for moist periods in udic, ustic, xeric, aridic, and torric regimes.[14] Regimes influence soil formation processes, including nutrient leaching in moist conditions and salt accumulation in dry ones.[2] The aquic regime applies to wet soils with saturation causing reducing conditions, where a water table is at or near the surface for at least 20 consecutive days or 30 cumulative days in normal years, often evidenced by redoximorphic features like low-chroma depletions or iron concentrations.[14] It occurs in poorly drained areas and can include sites with artificial drainage.[2] The udic regime characterizes humid climates where the control section is moist for more than 90% of the time or at least 90 consecutive days during the growing season when soil temperature exceeds 5°C or 8°C at 50 cm, with dry periods limited to fewer than 90 cumulative days annually and no more than 45 consecutive days.[14] Precipitation typically meets or exceeds potential evapotranspiration, supporting year-round plant growth without significant deficits.[2] In semiarid to subhumid regions, the ustic regime features intermittent moisture, with the control section dry for at least 90 cumulative days but moist for 90 consecutive days or more than 180 cumulative days (in warmer areas) during periods when soil temperature is above 5°C or 8°C at 50 cm.[14] Dry periods constitute less than 60% of cumulative days in mesic or thermic temperature regimes, allowing adequate moisture for one crop in most years but limiting continuous cultivation.[2] The xeric regime is specific to Mediterranean climates, where the control section is dry for 45 or more consecutive days in summer (after the summer solstice) and moist for 45 or more consecutive days in winter (after the winter solstice) when soil temperature exceeds 5°C or 8°C at 50 cm.[14] Moist conditions prevail for more than 50% of days or at least 90 consecutive days annually under these temperature thresholds.[2] Arid climates define the aridic regime, where the control section is dry more than half the cumulative days when soil temperature is greater than 5°C at 50 cm and moist for fewer than 90 consecutive days when above 8°C.[14] Potential evapotranspiration greatly exceeds precipitation, resulting in minimal plant-available water and potential salinity buildup.[2] The torric regime, introduced in the 1999 second edition of Soil Taxonomy to address extreme aridity, parallels aridic criteria but emphasizes prolonged dryness in very arid environments, such as cold deserts, with the control section moist for less than 90 consecutive days during the growing season.[14][2] Regime determination relies on water balance models comparing monthly precipitation to potential evapotranspiration, often using tools like the Newhall simulation, to estimate cumulative and consecutive dry or moist days in the control section.[14] A dry period is identified when the section holds less water than needed to reach field capacity, typically verified through field observations, climate data, or simulations over 30-year normals.[2] These regimes interact with soil temperature regimes in suborder nomenclature, such as combining xeric with mesic to denote specific climatic combinations.[14] Udic and aquic regimes promote leaching of bases and nutrients, while aridic and torric regimes favor salt retention and accumulation due to limited percolation.[2]| Regime | Key Climate | Moist Period Criteria | Dry Period Criteria | Example Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aquic | Wet, poorly drained | Saturation ≥20 consecutive or ≥30 cumulative days | Temporary | Redox features, reduced aeration |
| Udic | Humid | ≥90 consecutive days; >90% time | <90 cumulative days | High nutrient leaching |
| Ustic | Semiarid/subhumid | ≥90 consecutive or ≥180 cumulative days | ≥90 cumulative days | Intermittent cropping |
| Xeric | Mediterranean | ≥45 consecutive winter days; >50% annual | ≥45 consecutive summer days | Seasonal wetting/drying |
| Aridic | Arid | <90 consecutive days | >50% cumulative days | Salinity potential, irrigation needed |
| Torric | Very arid | <90 consecutive days (growing season) | >50% cumulative days; prolonged | Extreme dryness, minimal vegetation |