Results/Conclusions Preliminary analyses indicated that the distance at which soils can be considered spatially independent (i.e. no longer autocorrelated) were typically greater for temperature (50-101 m) than moisture (8-35 m). The larger range distances based on temperature may be due to small topographic features (e.g. slight rises and dips in the landscape) which would likely influence drainage more than heating. Of the different ecosystems studied so far, the agricultural site had the smallest range distances (50 m for temperature and 8 m moisture), while range distance was largest at the forest site (101 m and 35 m), and intermediate at the grassland site (88 m and 35 m). The agricultural site was ploughed regularly, which likely increased homogeneity in soil properties and resulted in the relatively short range distances. Whereas, the larger vegetation size at the forest site probably created autocorrelation at a larger scale (e.g. due to canopy gaps or individual tree effects) and resulted in the larger range distances. Preliminary results suggest that soil plots should be located >100 m apart in forests ecosystems, whereas in homogeneous agricultural systems 50 m may be sufficient. As more sites are analyzed general rules of thumb will be developed for different ecosystems.