In the course of evaluating relationships between soil fertility and indigenous agriculture in Kohala, Hawaii, we collected soil samples from sites with similar parent materials across a range of mean annual precipitation spanning <200 to >3500 mm/yr, including more than 400 surface samples (integrated 0-
Results/Conclusions
Kohala soils sampled in upland slope positions fell into four major process domains, divided by three thresholds. At rainfall <~500 mm/yr, pedogenic carbonate influenced soil structure and chemistry, and phosphorus availability was moderate (50-100 mg/kg). From 500 - 1700 mm/yr, base saturation ranged from 30-80%, and phosphorus availability was high (100-300 mg/kg). Biological uplift enriched surface soils in phosphorus (to twice parent material levels) and iron (marginally). From 1700 - 3000 mm/yr, primary minerals were depleted by weathering, and soils were acid (< pH 4.5) and infertile; aluminum had been mobilized from surface soils to a greater extent than iron, and atmospheric deposition was the main source of essential cations. Above ~3000 mm/yr, iron reduction has led to a greater mobility of iron than aluminum, leading to a greater mobilization of phosphorus, and carbon:nitrogen ratios increased substantially. Both indigenous Hawaiian rain-fed agriculture and modern cattle ranching depend on the second-driest process domain. These process domains also occur on substrates that are much older and younger than Kohala (150 – 400 kyr), but some of the thresholds between them occur at progressively lower rainfall on progressively older substrates.