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Web Soil Surveys and Soil Surveys

Web Soil Surveys and Soil Surveys. Kennedy Cunliffe-Koehler Dainger Adams Ashlee Marz. How does land use affect soil?. Farming, mining, and construction affects soil the most. Farming affects soil by their techniques and over grazing.

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Web Soil Surveys and Soil Surveys

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  1. Web Soil Surveys and Soil Surveys Kennedy Cunliffe-Koehler Dainger Adams Ashlee Marz

  2. How does land use affect soil? • Farming, mining, and construction affects soil the most. • Farming affects soil by their techniques and over grazing. • Construction and mining affects soil because they dig up the land. • Soil can be lost if it is exposed to wind or rain.

  3. What are the limitations of soil? • The limitations of our soil is all the construction. • Also, the buildings that are already here.

  4. 8 Land Capability Classes • Class 1: Soils have slight limitations that restrict their use. • Class 2: Soils have moderate limitations that reduce the choice of plants or require moderate conservation practices. • Class 3: Soils have severe limitations that reduce the choice of plants or require very careful management or both. • Class 4: Soils have very severe limitations that restrict the choice of plants or require vary careful management or both. • Class 5: Soils have little or no hazard of erosion but have other limitations and practical to remove that limit their use to mainly pasture, range, forestland, or wildlife food and cover. • Class 6: Soils have severe limitations that make them generally unsuited to cultivation and that limit their use to mainly pasture, range, forestland, or wildlife food and cover. • Class 7: Soils have very severe limitations that make them unsuited for cultivation and that restrict their use to mainly grazing, forestland, or wildlife. • Class 8: Soils and miscellaneous areas have limitations that preclude their use for commercial plant production and limit their use to recreation, wildlife, water supply, or for aesthetic purposes.

  5. Soil Drainage Classes • Very Poorly Drained - Water is at or near the soil surface during much of the growing season. Internal free-water is shallow and persistent or permanent. Unless the soil is artificially drained, most mesophytic crops cannot be grown. Commonly, the soil occupies a depression or is level. If rainfall is persistent or high, the soil can be sloping. • Poorly Drained - The soil is wet at shallow depths periodically during the growing season or remains wet for long periods. Internal free-water is shallow or very shallow and common or persistent. Unless the soil is artificially drained, most mesophytic crops cannot be grown. The soil, however, is not continuously wet directly below plow depth. The water table is commonly the result of low or very low saturated hydraulic conductivity class or persistent rainfall, or a combination of both factors. • Somewhat Poorly Drained - The soil is wet at a shallow depth for significant periods during the growing season. Internal free-water is commonly shallow to moderately deep and transitory to permanent. Unless the soil is artificially drained, the growth of most mesophytic plants is markedly restricted. The soil commonly has a low or very low saturated hydraulic conductivity class, or a high water table, or receives water from lateral flow, or persistent rainfall, or some combination of these factors. • Moderately Well Drained - Water moves through the soil slowly during some periods of the year. Internal free water commonly is moderately deep and may be transitory or permanent. The soil is wet for only a short time within the rooting depth during the growing season. The soil commonly has a moderately low, or lower, saturated hydraulic conductivity class within 1 meter of the surface, or periodically receives high rainfall, or both. • Well Drained - Water moves through the soil readily, but not rapidly. Internal free-water commonly is deep or very deep; annual duration is not specified. Water is available to plants in humid regions during much of the growing season. Wetness does not inhibit growth of roots for significant periods during most growing seasons. The soil is deep to, or lacks redoximorphic features. • Somewhat Excessively Drained - Water moves through the soil rapidly. Internal free water commonly is very rare or very deep. The soils are commonly coarse-textured, have high saturated hydraulic conductivity, and lack redoximorphic features. • Excessively Drained - Water moves through the soil very rapidly. Internal free water commonly is very rare or very deep. The soils are commonly coarse-textured, have very high saturated hydraulic conductivity, and lack redoximorphic features.

  6. Characteristics of hydric soils • Characteristics of hydric soils are frequent, prolonged saturation and low oxygen content. • This will eventually lead to anaerobic chemical environments where reduced iron is present.

  7. How soils fit into definitions of wetlands • Definition for a wetland is “Land where an excess of water is the dominant factor determining the nature of soil development and the types of animals and plant communities living at the soil surface. It spans a continuum of environments where terrestrial and aquatic systems intergrade.” • This definition comprises three aspects--water, soil, and organisms, which are accepted by wetland scientists as the basis for recognizing and describing wetland environments. • This means soils play a very big role in wetlands. In order to be classified as a wetland, scientists look at the soil to determine if it could be considered a wetland or something different. Also, the type of soil determines what type of wetland it is.

  8. TEST QUESTIONS • How many land capability classes are there? • True/False- Soil can be lost if it is exposed only to wind. • True/False- Hydric soils have low oxygen content. • What is one of the main things that effect soil? • Water industry • Extermination businesses • Farming • Wildlife rescue 5. What is not a reason that soil is limited in our area? a. Construction b. Mining c. Buildings already here

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