Abstract:
The study presents the results of using geo-information systems and neuro-technologies for modeling spatial heterogeneity and
forecasting changes in agro-chemical properties of steppe soil fertility exemplified by Kherson region of Ukraine. Modeling allowed
determining general regularities of impacts of the current agricultural practices on changes in the content of macronutrients over the
past 50 years that have caused the ongoing process of a gradual decrease in the content of humus, nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium
in steppe soils. A lack of balanced crop rotations, regular, uniform and necessary supply of fertilizers, occurrence of water erosion,
including irrigation erosion and deflation, and also long-term irrigation led to a drop in the content of macronutrients in 1970–2020:
the content of humus – by 0.36% (from 2.56% to 2.20%) or by 14.1% in statistical relation; mobile phosphorus – by 34.2% (from
62.0 mg·kg-1 to 40.8 mg·kg-1); exchangeable potassium – by 17.8% (from 442.4 mg·kg-1 to 363.8 mg·kg-1); a decrease in the content
of nitrifiable nitrogen – by 17.0% (from 23.0 mg·kg-1 to 19.1 mg·kg-1) on the average in 2013-2020.
Geo-statistical analysis made it possible to determine spatial regularities of changes in the content of macronutrients in steppe
soils. The method of autocorrelation analysis was used to measure the minimum and maximum radii of typicality of the formation
of agro-chemical properties of steppe soils being from 2.5 to 12.5 km, respectively. It indicates considerable spatial heterogeneity
in distribution of macronutrients within the contours of different soil types. The neuro-technological modeling resulted in the creation of three-layer artificial neural networks for space-time modeling of the content of macronutrients in steppe soils.
The reliability of approximation of neuro-models on test samples equaled 92.4–94.8%. An irreversible process of gradual
depletion of steppe soils is forecasted under the current agricultural practices: a drop in the content of humus – by 0.01% per
year on non-irrigated lands, by 0.03% per year on the average on irrigated lands; nitrifiable nitrogen – by 0.04 mg·kg-1 of soil on
non-irrigated lands, by 0.06 mg·kg-1 of soil per year on the average on irrigated lands; mobile phosphorus – by 0.16 mg·kg-1 of soil
per year on non-irrigated lands, by 0.18 mg·kg-1 of soil per year on the average on irrigated lands; exchangeable potassium – by
1.9 mg·kg-1 of soil per year on non-irrigated lands, by 3.1 mg·kg-1 of soil per year on the average on irrigated lands. The obtained
result determines territorial priorities of the regional policies, making it possible to apply differential effectiveness of the soil-protecting block of agricultural systems.