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1.INTRODUCTIONThe decline in Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) is recognised as being one of the eight soil threats identified in the European Union’s Thematic Strategy for Soil Protection (COM(2006) 231 final)1. One of the key goals of the strategy is to maintain and enhance SOC levels. A recent policy document known as the Roadmap to a Resource Efficient Europe (COM(2011) 571 final)2, which is one of the building blocks of the Europe 2020 strategy, sets the objective of increasing levels of SOC in areas where less than 2% of SOC has been detected, by 2020. Most of the food, fuel and fibre used by humans is produced on soil3. Soil resources are critical for future food security and conservation of biodiversity, as well as to secure other important ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, water-retention capacity, and flood prevention. Soil functions are crucial both for society and the environment, and should be maintained. Nevertheless, soil resources in many parts of Europe are being overexploited, degraded and irreversibly lost due to inappropriate land management practices, industrial activities and land-use changes that lead to soil sealing, contamination, erosion, and loss of organic carbon. The European Commission recognises the value of soils, and has proposed a directive for the protection of soils1. Detailed spatial coverage of soil organic carbon is needed to guide sustainable management decisions on land use practices. The current pan-European estimates of soil organic carbon at 0-30cm are based on the Organic Carbon in Topsoils (OCTOP) model4. To generate soil organic carbon estimates, the OCTOP model takes into account soil type, land use/land cover and climatic conditions. In 2009, the European Soil Data Centre (ESDAC) conducted a SOC data collection exercise through the European Environment Information and Observation Network for soil (EIONET-SOIL)5. Cyprus was not among the countries that provided data in the EIONET SOC data collection5 exercise, and is therefore not included in the modelled OCTOP dataset. In this paper, we present a novel methodology to deploy spatial coverage of SOC based on a ground observation data and remote sensing datasets using Support Vector Regression as an inference model. The objectives of this paper are to demonstrate how the LUCAS soil database allows us to: 2.MATERIALS AND METHODS2.1Study areaCyprus is an island with an area of 9,251 km2, located in the far eastern corner of the Mediterranean basin. Its topography includes two mountain ranges, one in the north and the other in the south west part. Between them lies a plain. The cultivated area is estimated at 1,340 km2. Cyprus is the third largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after the Italian islands of Sicily and Sardinia, both in terms of area and population. It measures 240 km in length and 100 km in width at its widest point. It lies between latitudes 34° and 36° N, and longitudes 32° and 35° E. The physical relief of the island is dominated by two mountain ranges, the Troodos Mountains and the smaller Kyrenia Range, and the central plain they encompass, the Mesaoria. The Mesaoria plain is drained by the Pedieos River, the longest on the island. The Troodos Mountains cover most of the southern and western portions of the island and account for roughly half its area. The highest point on Cyprus is Mount Olympus at 1,952 m, located in the centre of the Troodos range. The narrow Kyrenia Range, extending along the northern coastline, occupies substantially less area, and elevations are lower, reaching a maximum of 1,024 m. Cyprus has the warmest climate (and warmest winters) in the Mediterranean part of the European Union. The average annual temperature on the coast is around 24°C during the day and 14°C at night. Its Mediterranean climate is characterised by a rainy season (November to mid-March) and a longer dry season (mid-March to October)6. The average annual precipitation is 363 mm yr−1 7, with a great amount of geospatial variability as shown in the historical data from a number of recording stations8. The dominant soil types in Cyprus are Regosols, Leptisols, Cambisols, Luvisols, Vertisols, Solonchaks and Gypsisols9. The soils of Cyprus are degraded due to high erosion risk, landslides, increased levels of soil sealing in the coastal areas, and low organic carbon levels. The geology of Cyprus is dominated by the Troodos Ophiolite, which is a fragment of a fully developed oceanic crust, consisting of plutonic, intrusive and volcanic rocks and chemical sediments. Sedimentary formations cover the coastal plains in the south and the intermountain plain in the north10. Regarding land use/land cover, 7.76% of Cyprus is artificial land, 41.45% cropland, 3.7% grassland, 38.79% forests, and 8.3% plantations11. Soil sealing is an alarming problem in Cyprus, responsible for a loss of 0.84% of agricultural land in the period 2000-2006. 2.2Land Use/Cover Area frame Statistical Survey (LUCAS) databaseLUCAS (Land Use/Cover Area frame Statistical Survey) is an in-situ survey, which means that the data are gathered through direct field observations. The aim of the LUCAS survey is to gather fully harmonised data on land use/cover in the European Union Member States and their changes over time. In the LUCAS (2009) survey, 265,000 geo-referenced points were visited by more than 500 field surveyors. The survey points were selected from a standard 2 km x 2 km grid based on stratification information provided by Eurostat12. The LUCAS (2009) survey was the first to include a soil module. Topsoil samples (0-30 cm) were collected from 10% of the survey points, thus providing approximately 20,000 soil samples. While LUCAS soil samples were taken from all land use/land cover types, the survey focused mainly on agricultural areas. Each soil sample was taken from the topsoil zone (top 30 cm) with a weight of circa 0.5 kg. The objective of the soil module was to improve the availability of harmonised data on soil parameters in Europe. The 20,000 LUCAS soil samples were analysed in a single ISO-certified laboratory that used harmonised chemical and physical analytical methods (compliant with ISO standards, or their equivalent) in order to obtain a coherent and harmonised dataset with pan-European coverage. The analysis results formed the LUCAS soil database, including, inter alia, SOC in topsoils (0–30cm), expressed in g kg−1. The LUCAS points were stratified in order to be representative of individual land uses. Points above 1,000 m in altitude were excluded, with few exceptions. In 2009, the LUCAS soil survey was carried out in the 23 EU Member States that had already taken part in the 2006 LUCAS Land Use/Cover survey, plus Cyprus and Malta. The latter two countries participated in the 2009 LUCAS soil survey using their own surveyors, but following the general sampling guidelines. In 2012, the LUCAS soil survey was carried out in Bulgaria and Romania. The average density of LUCAS soil points is circa 1 sample every 199 km2, which corresponds approximately to a grid cell of 14 km x 14 km13. The Cypriot surveyors collected 90 soil samples from southern Greek Cypriot due partially to accessibility issues. The density of points is much higher (1 sample every 103 km2) than the rest of LUCAS soil survey. Most of the points were sampled in areas with elevations of 0–99 m and 200-399 m (Fig. 1). Regarding the slopes, most of the points were sampled in slopes between 6–12 degrees (Fig. 1). Only 11 points have been sampled in flat areas (0-2 degrees). The soil geochemical atlas of Cyprus is a recent addition to the series of national to continental-scale geochemical mapping programmes implemented over the past two decades for environmental and resource applications. The soil geochemical atlas of Cyprus was compiled at the high sampling density of 1 site per 1 km2, with multi-element and multi-method analysis performed on samples of topsoil (0–25 cm) and subsoil (50–75 cm), from a grid of over 5,350 sites across a major portion of Cyprus14. However, there were not available enough soil organic carbon data in order to be used in the current study. 2.3LandsatLandsat remote sensing images facilitate the extraction of vegetation indexes such as the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), which is an important attribute for the correlation of Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) distribution. Since possible land-use/land cover changes may have occurred between 2003 (Landsat images) and 2009 (LUCAS survey), the correspondence between point measures, Landsat pixels and the actual state of the land might be lost. To reduce the occurrence of possible mismatches, neighbouring pixels were also considered as candidates for the regression procedure. Moreover, neighbouring pixel values provide some form of additional information about the variation of reflectance over larger areas, and provide information about reflectance patterns. As different kinds of land cover result in highly spatially correlated patterns15, characterised by structured and defined shapes, their identification may improve the accuracy of the prediction of soil properties and, in particular, SOC. 2.4Aster DEMThe Global Digital Elevation Model (GDEM) is a relatively high resolution (30-m) Digital Elevation Model (DEM) (Fig. 2) obtained from the ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer) satellite images. The GDEM covers the planet from 83 degrees North to 83 degrees South, and is created from the stereoscopic correlation of visible and near-infrared images taken globally by ASTER. In spite of its relatively high resolution, the quality of the GDEM is rather low due to artifacts. In order to reduce the effect of artifacts on the derivation of covariates, the DEM was filtered using wavelet thresholds to remove most of the artifacts while preserving the general shape of land features. Elevation, slope, length of slope, Topographic Wetness Index and solar radiation are covariates derived from GDEM which have an important role in the proposed regression analysis. 2.5Support Vector RegressionSupport Vector Regression (SVR)16 is an extension of the Support Vector Machines (SVM)17 approach to regression. In the case of a linear function f, this has the form: where 〈.,.〉 denotes the dot product. It is evident how this formulation is similar to that of linear regression. However, in SVR, or more specifically in ε-SVR18, an important difference is that the loss function has an ε-insensitivity zone defined as Lε: Where ε defines the radius of the hyper-tube within which the regression function must lie. Thus, loss is equal to 0 if the difference between the predicted f(x,w) and the measured yi is less than ε. In this way, SVR uses only the data pairs lying on the edges of or outside the tube. The only requirements for f are that the function must be as flat as possible, and that the errors must deviate less than ε from the targets. The empirical risk is then minimised, minimising the function: So a linear regression hyperplane f(x) = 〈w,x〉 + b, is found by minimising: where C is a term which acts as a trade-off between the two terms in the equation. As some data can still lie outside the ε-tube, it is possible add slack variables (ξ,ξ*) 19. These variables measure the distance between the observation and the surface of the ε tube, leading to large deviations in the observations. The value of the two slack variables is linked, since one of the two variables always equals zero, so the slack can only be positive (ξi* = 0) or negative (ξi = 0). Thus a general formulation to minimise both the complexity of the model (measured by ‖w‖2) and its prediction error (max(ξi,ξi*) = ξi + ξi*), is: where C determines the trade-off between the flatness of the hyperplane and the amount of data pairs that are tolerated outside the ε-tube. The above formulation corresponds to an ε-insensitivity loss function |ξ|ε described as: The SRM principle addresses the problem of over-fitting by balancing the model’s complexity against its success at fitting the training data. After calculation it is possible to find the optimal weight vector of the regression hyperplane as: and the best regression hyperplane found is expressed as: The SVR formulation has been extended to perform non-linear regression. The non-linear approximation is approached by using basis expansion, projecting the original data into a higher dimensionality feature space F: where Φ(x) is the mapping function. The kernel transformation approach is not exclusive to SVR, but is shared by other techniques such as splines or Gaussian processes. The advantage of kernel transformation is that the mapping task could be performed using simple kernel functions20. A kernel function K(xi, xj) is a function in the input space, which has the advantage of avoiding a complete mapping; instead scalar products in feature space ΦT(xi)Φ(xj) are calculated directly computing kernels. In this way it is possible to avoid the problems connected with extreme dimensionality, and to construct an SVR which operates in a virtually infinite dimension space. 3.RESULTS3.1Soil Organic Carbon Map of CyprusThe topsoil Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) map of Cyprus (Fig. 3) has a cell size resolution of 30 m x 30 m. The soil organic carbon content ranges from 0 to 43.3%, with a mean value of 1.53% and a standard deviation of 0.5%. The western part of the island shows the highest concentrations of SOC, especially in the Paphos forest. Past assessments of soil organic carbon in Cyprus are in agreement with the current study estimates. Dunan et al.21 have estimated SOC concentration at between 0.99 and 1.66% in northern Cyprus. A recent application of the CENTURY model at the pan-European scale estimated SOC content at between 0.8 and 1.2% for arable lands22. Since the LUCAS soil survey has been performed only in the western part of the island, the data has been extrapolated to the non-accessible part (the northeastern part of Cyprus). As a result, the prediction of SOC for northeastern Cyprus has a high level of uncertainty. Based on a literature review and a comparison with past studies, the topsoil Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) map of Cyprus has been cross validated using a Leave-One-Out (LOO) procedure (Fig. 4). Cross-validation is often used to estimate the extent to which a prediction model can be generalised by subsequently checking the model’s capability of predicting a single sample that has been left out of the fitting set. The LOO cross validation allows for a relatively unbiased verification of the model. In this study, the LOO model was refitted at each iteration, and the best combination of the SVR parameters found. The final model utilises the best combination of SVR parameters found across all the LOO iterations. 3.2Discussion and conclusionsThe estimation of SOC was derived by relating field measurements with a set of spatially exhaustive covariates, including DEM-derived terrain features, MODIS Vegetation indices (16 days, including reflectance) and Landsat ETM+ data. In particular, the SOC levels in the LUCAS database were related with the covariate values in the collocated pixels and their eight surrounding neighbours. The regression model adopted made use of Support Vector Machines (SVM) regression, as this technique is resistant to collinearity and very robust to noise. The SVM regression proved to be very efficient in mapping SOC, with an R2 fitting of 0.81 and a, R2 k-fold cross-validation of 0.68. The remarkable outcome of the SVM model is the fact that the high temporal resolution of the MODIS data greatly enhances the prediction of SOC. This is probably related to the seasonal variation of vegetation cover and its influence on SOC dynamics. This study proves that the inference of SOC levels is possible at regional scales using a limited number of Earth observations. The proposed model can produce data at very high resolution (30 m x 30 m pixels) using covariates. The model, which needs high processing power, can be applied at the regional scale. The results were also verified both with literature findings and using cross-validation techniques such as Leave-one-out (LOO). 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