4.5 Article

Efficient sampling for geostatistical surveys

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 70, Issue 5, Pages 975-989

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejss.12797

Keywords

geostatistics; ordinary kriging; pedometrics; sample size; spatial coverage scheme; uncertainty assessment

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration [607000]
  2. NERC [bgs05018] Funding Source: UKRI

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A geostatistical survey for soil requires rational choices regarding the sampling strategy. If the variogram of the property of interest is known then it is possible to optimize the sampling scheme such that an objective function related to the survey error is minimized. However, the variogram is rarely known prior to sampling. Instead it must be approximated by using either a variogram estimated from a reconnaissance survey or a variogram estimated for the same soil property in similar conditions. For this reason, spatial coverage schemes are often preferred, because they rely on the simple dispersion of sampling units as uniformly as possible, and are similar to those produced by minimizing the kriging variance. If extra sampling locations are added close to those in a spatial coverage scheme then the scheme might be broadly similar to one produced by minimizing the total error (i.e. kriging variance plus the prediction error due to uncertainty in the covariance parameters). We consider the relative merits of these different sampling approaches by comparing their mean total error for different specified random functions. Our results showed the considerable benefit of adding close-pairs to a spatial coverage scheme, and that optimizing with respect to the total error generally gave a small further advantage. When we consider the example of sampling for geostatistical survey of clay content of the soil, an optimized scheme based on the average of previously reported clay variograms was fairly robust compared to the spatial coverage plus close-pairs scheme. We conclude that the direct optimization of spatial surveys was only rarely worthwhile. For most cases, it is best to apply a spatial coverage scheme with a proportion of additional sampling locations to provide some closely spaced pairs. Furthermore, our results indicated that the number of observations required for an effective geostatistical survey depend on the variogram parameters. Highlights We compared spatial coverage and spatial coverage plus a subset of 10% from the total sample as close-pairs. The objective function encompasses variogram uncertainty and prediction error variance. Spatial coverage schemes always performed poorly because of the lack of information at short distances. Using a scheme in which 10% of the sampling units are taken at short distances is a robust strategy.

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