Noninvasive geophysical methods have a great potential for improving soil-biological studies at field or regional scales: they enable the rapid acquisition of soil information which may help to identify potential habitats for soil biota. A precondition for this application is the existence of close relationships between geophysical measurements and the soil organism of interest. This study was conducted to determine whether field measurements of apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) are related to abundances of earthworms in tilled soils. Relationships between ECa and earthworm populations were investigated along transects at 42 plots under reduced and conventional tillage at a 74 ha field on sandy-loam soil in NE Germany. Relations were analyzed with linear-regression and spatial analysis. The apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) was quantitatively related to earthworm abundances sampled 5 months after the geophysical measurements. No relationship was found, however, in plots under conventional tillage when analyzed separately. If earthworm abundances were known at every other location along the transects and if the state-space approach was used for analysis, the analysis of ECa measurements and earthworm abundances indicated that 50% of the earthworm samples could have been substituted by ECa measurements. Further research is needed to fully evaluate the potential of ECa measurements for predicting earthworm habitats in tilled soil. © 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
CITATION STYLE
Joschko, M., Gebbers, R., Barkusky, D., & Timmer, J. (2010). The apparent electrical conductivity as a surrogate variable for predicting earthworm abundances in tilled soils. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science, 173(4), 584–590. https://doi.org/10.1002/jpln.200800071
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