Spatial trends in the wind abrasion resistance of cultivated machair soil, South Uist, Scottish Outer Hebrides

Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
The machair is a low-lying coastal grassland system with internationally recognised conservation importance, found only in parts of northern and western Scotland and Ireland. Machair soils are exposed to some of the highest mean wind-speeds in the UK and are susceptible to aeolian erosion. Samples of machair soils were collected from three transects perpendicular to the coast. A simple rotary sieve was used to quantify soil wind abrasion resistance (WAR) of the collected samples. WAR is directly linked to the threshold velocity at which sediment removal is initiated on exposed soil. Sieving subdivided the samples into erodible, potentially erodible, and non-erodible fractions and permitted testing of differences between the fractions. Physical and chemical tests were employed to characterise soil samples and fractions, and in a novel approach, FTIR spectroscopy allowed visualisation of the changes in soil composition along the transects. Principal component analysis and pruned regression trees were employed to model wind abrasion resistance from soil properties, including the FTIR spectra. Results indicated intra- and inter-site variability in wind abrasion covering the full range of possible wind abrasion resistance values. Strong correlations were found between wind abrasion resistance and soil organic matter concentrations, persistence of water repellence, mean particle size, arsenic concentration, water content at time of sampling, and sand mineralogy. For wind abrasion resistance greater than 10 regression tree analysis was capable of predicting whether actual wind abrasion resistance values were low (<15), medium (>15 and <35), or high (>35).
Year
2015
Category
Refereed journal
Output Tags
WP3.4 - Resilience of Scotland's biodiversity to change