The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada

The Land Suitability Rating System (LSRS) is a rule-based set of algorithms that integrate soil, climate and landscape factors to calculate a classed suitability rating for a given landscape to support commercial field crop production. The attributes used to define each of the factors are based on t...

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Main Authors: Michael Bock, Pierre-Yves Gasser, Wayne W. Pettapiece, Anthony J. Brierley, Andy Bootsma, Peter Schut, Denise Neilsen, C. A. Scott Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00077/full
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spelling doaj-7c6547b0501f4054825c13a54d1384cc2020-11-25T02:32:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2018-07-01610.3389/fenvs.2018.00077372513The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in CanadaMichael Bock0Pierre-Yves Gasser1Wayne W. Pettapiece2Anthony J. Brierley3Andy Bootsma4Peter Schut5Denise Neilsen6C. A. Scott Smith7Science and Technology Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Edmonton, AB, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agricultural and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, ON, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Edmonton, AB, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Edmonton, AB, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agricultural and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, ON, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agricultural and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, ON, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Summerland, BC, CanadaScience and Technology Branch, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Summerland, BC, CanadaThe Land Suitability Rating System (LSRS) is a rule-based set of algorithms that integrate soil, climate and landscape factors to calculate a classed suitability rating for a given landscape to support commercial field crop production. The attributes used to define each of the factors are based on their proven ability to affect crop growth, their ability to be measured (or estimated by proxy) and their availability in accessible databases. The LSRS was first published in 1995 by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada as a site-specific, manual calculator for spring-seeded small grains that incorporated sets of attribute point deduction curves based on expert knowledge. Since that time the system has been expanded to include additional crop modules and all data handling and calculations are automated through a set of web-based applications. The current version of LSRS (version 5) is implemented in Ruby on Rails® software as a suite of web services. The system runs against any soil map with standardized Canadian Soil Information Service soil data tables to process soil attributes and calculate limitations to crop growth. A climate factor rating is based on crop-specific agro-climatic indices and thresholds. Climatic indices have historically been calculated from 30-year climate normal periods using monthly data but LSRS can now also utilize daily data records which facilitate trend analyses within annual historic records. The use of available gridded climate datasets enables direct overlay and extraction of climate attributes to the spatial extent of soil map polygons. Lastly, the system incorporates a landscape factor related to land erodibility and constraints to management. Each of the three suitability factors is assigned a class rating between 1 (no limitations) and 7 (unsuitable) with the final overall rating being the most limiting of the three factors. Recent improvements in the ability of the system to process multiple climate datasets mean outputs from Global Circulation Models may also be useful for the LSRS model in assessing possible impacts of climate change on crop suitability. LSRS is used increasingly as a spatial research tool in assessing potential changes in crop distributions at both national and regional scales.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00077/fullland suitabilityclimate changesoil mapsagro-climatic indicesGlobal Circulation Modelagricultural capability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Bock
Pierre-Yves Gasser
Wayne W. Pettapiece
Anthony J. Brierley
Andy Bootsma
Peter Schut
Denise Neilsen
C. A. Scott Smith
spellingShingle Michael Bock
Pierre-Yves Gasser
Wayne W. Pettapiece
Anthony J. Brierley
Andy Bootsma
Peter Schut
Denise Neilsen
C. A. Scott Smith
The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
Frontiers in Environmental Science
land suitability
climate change
soil maps
agro-climatic indices
Global Circulation Model
agricultural capability
author_facet Michael Bock
Pierre-Yves Gasser
Wayne W. Pettapiece
Anthony J. Brierley
Andy Bootsma
Peter Schut
Denise Neilsen
C. A. Scott Smith
author_sort Michael Bock
title The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
title_short The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
title_full The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
title_fullStr The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
title_full_unstemmed The Land Suitability Rating System Is a Spatial Planning Tool to Assess Crop Suitability in Canada
title_sort land suitability rating system is a spatial planning tool to assess crop suitability in canada
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The Land Suitability Rating System (LSRS) is a rule-based set of algorithms that integrate soil, climate and landscape factors to calculate a classed suitability rating for a given landscape to support commercial field crop production. The attributes used to define each of the factors are based on their proven ability to affect crop growth, their ability to be measured (or estimated by proxy) and their availability in accessible databases. The LSRS was first published in 1995 by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada as a site-specific, manual calculator for spring-seeded small grains that incorporated sets of attribute point deduction curves based on expert knowledge. Since that time the system has been expanded to include additional crop modules and all data handling and calculations are automated through a set of web-based applications. The current version of LSRS (version 5) is implemented in Ruby on Rails® software as a suite of web services. The system runs against any soil map with standardized Canadian Soil Information Service soil data tables to process soil attributes and calculate limitations to crop growth. A climate factor rating is based on crop-specific agro-climatic indices and thresholds. Climatic indices have historically been calculated from 30-year climate normal periods using monthly data but LSRS can now also utilize daily data records which facilitate trend analyses within annual historic records. The use of available gridded climate datasets enables direct overlay and extraction of climate attributes to the spatial extent of soil map polygons. Lastly, the system incorporates a landscape factor related to land erodibility and constraints to management. Each of the three suitability factors is assigned a class rating between 1 (no limitations) and 7 (unsuitable) with the final overall rating being the most limiting of the three factors. Recent improvements in the ability of the system to process multiple climate datasets mean outputs from Global Circulation Models may also be useful for the LSRS model in assessing possible impacts of climate change on crop suitability. LSRS is used increasingly as a spatial research tool in assessing potential changes in crop distributions at both national and regional scales.
topic land suitability
climate change
soil maps
agro-climatic indices
Global Circulation Model
agricultural capability
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00077/full
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