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Rare and endangered soils in the Taihang Mountain region, North China
Author(s) -
Fu Tonggang,
Han Lipu,
Gao Hui,
Liang Hongzhu,
Liu Jintong
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
land degradation and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.403
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1099-145X
pISSN - 1085-3278
DOI - 10.1002/ldr.3381
Subject(s) - endangered species , environmental science , soil water , critically endangered , ecology , land use , physical geography , geography , habitat , soil science , biology
Loss of pedodiversity is a worsening land degradation issue worldwide. Knowledge of rare and endangered soils is critical for the protection of pedodiversity. However, such knowledge remains limited, especially for mountain regions with intensive human disturbance. In this paper, rare and endangered soils were identified using the Harmonized World Soil Database (HWSD), and their spatial distributions were determined for Taihang Mountain region, North China. Furthermore, the effects of natural (elevation, precipitation, temperature, slope gradient, soil parent, and vegetation) and human (farming and population density) factors on rare and endangered soils were analyzed. The results showed that based on the second‐level HWSD classification, a total of 94 soil types were identified in Taihang Mountain region, 36 of which were rare and 7 endangered soils. It implied that there was the need to protect soil resources in this region. Cluster analysis showed that Dystric Podzoluvisols and Mollic Gleysols were the most endangered soils in terms of both area and distribution, suggesting that these soil types needed to be protected. Most of the rare and endangered soils were distributed in the northern of Taihang Mountain, indicating that the northern part needed more attention. Correlation analysis showed that the effect of human factors on rare and endangered soils was more important than that of natural factors, confirming that human activities were largely responsible for the occurrence of rare and endangered soils. Such results provided not only further understanding of pedodiversity but also useful information for protection of soil resources and control of land degradation.