Soil-Based Vegetation Productivity Model for Coryell County, Texas

: Managers, scientists, planners and designers of landscapes are interested in systematic investigations, to predict the reconstruction of disturbed soil resources for optimum vegetation productivity. In this study, a predictive equation for estimating neo-soil plant growth in Coryell County, Texas was developed. The equation predicts the vegetation growth for wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.), oats [ Avena sativa L. (1753)], sorghum [ Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], cotton lint ( Gossypium hirsutum L.), Bermuda grass [ Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers.], and rangeland production in general. The results suggest that an all-vegetation predictive model was highly signiﬁcant ( p ≤ 0.0001), explaining over 80% of the variance. The equation employed hydraulic conductivity as a main-e ﬀ ect variable; bulk density and hydraulic conductivity as squared terms; and percent clay times bulk density, bulk density times soil reaction, hydraulic conductivity times available water holding capacity, and hydraulic conductivity times soil reactions as ﬁrst order interaction terms, with each predicting variable containing a p -value equal to or less than 0.05. The results suggest that an annual crop equation and a plant-speciﬁc cotton lint equation also have merit.


Introduction
Since the 1980s, reclamation scientists have urged the development of science-based equations to predict plant growth in soils [1][2][3]. The call was made because native soils were being disturbed (at the time by surface mining, but also as a consequence of urban sprawl, transportation corridors and facilities, and general effects of human activity on the planet). The reconstructed soil required assessment, as it rarely resembled the native soils previously residing upon the site. In the United States, private soil testing companies, universities and county government cooperatives test soil for soil texture, soil nutrient recommendations and engineering properties, for construction purposes. The intention and call for soil productivity equations paralleled these existing tests, as it was believed that soil productivity equations could be added to the palette of available tests pertinent to soil metrics and properties, especially in surface mine reclamation, but also with regards to the vast array of human activities that reconstruct the soil profile.
The typical approach was to construct a new soil (neo-sol) profile, and then grow crops on the new profile to determine the soil's productivity, comparing the productivity with past productivity or to current reference areas. However, this takes time, often up to 10 years of evaluation. There are wet years, dry years, insect infestations, diseases, and varying spatial environmental conditions (such as heavy rainfall in one area, and no rainfall at all just 500 m away). Thus, it often took a decade of biodiversity, and covary with vegetation productivity, forming a network/web as opposed to simply a set of independent and dependent variables.
To produce the detailed soil surveys, the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), formerly the Soil Conservation Service (SCS), grows numerous crops across numerous measured soil profiles, and provides a county by county data set. Each data set takes about 10 years to prepare, and often over one million American dollars (in 1980's American dollars) to construct [3,4]. These data sets are quite comprehensive, with detailed maps for each county studied. Most of the county data and maps were produced for American agricultural areas, and financed by the Federal government [6,9]. Much of the American landscape still has not been assessed and mapped, especially in mountainous areas [9]. While some of these data sets are over 60 years old, they remain the most detailed and reliable sets of soil productivity, and are extensively used by farmers and county agents today. They only become dated when urban sprawl overtakes an area, or when the land is disturbed by mining or another form of disturbance, changing the soil profile. Since these maps and data sets are expensive to construct, many/most parts of the world have yet to create such detailed information sets about their landscapes. Many countries do not have the financial resources to collect such detailed information about their agricultural and forested lands. "I have been invited to Asian and European countries to discuss how to produce the data necessary to statistically derive soil productivity equations. Most of the time colleagues are quite impressed with the American initiative." states Dr. Burley. "But when confronted with the cost and time necessary to make such a study, several millions in American dollars or equivalent per 300,000 to 400,000 hectares, the effort seems too difficult to achieve. Most academic research projects only have a two or three year cycle and may be only at most several hundred thousand American dollars in cost. Spending 30 years and hundreds of millions of dollars to develop a detailed national data set is beyond the time-frame or financial resources for many countries and research agendas. Thus the American data set is somewhat special, reflective of a wealthy nation, and a Federal government focused upon the long-term. In many places around the world, there is pressure for modest spending and immediate research results that cannot match what the Americans achieved, especially during the post World War II era. I am doubtful if the Americans were just starting upon such a research endeavor, they would have achieved the same comprehensive and expansive data set that now exists. It is too easy for politicians to cut the funding of projects initiated by predecessors, seeking immediate results that fit the timing of re-election cycles. This is an unfortunate reality for anyone interested in science and sustainability issues. In addition, I have encountered international governmental and business groups interested in making a quick and lucrative profit from advanced agricultural techniques, as opposed to maintaining the health of disturbed soils. On the other hand, I have met farmers who intimately know their soil and land, taking a long term perspective in managing the soil resources." With the American data sets, the first reported equations employing this information were reported for Clay County Minnesota, by Burley, Thomsen and Kenkel [11][12][13]. They discovered that most grown crops and woody plants grown in the study area preferred the same soil characteristics. This is known as the "Mesic Soil Vegetation Preference Theory." This was an important finding. Before this time, there was much debate concerning the number of equations necessary to predict vegetation productivity. The Mesic Soil Vegetation Preference Theory and statistical results (model) suggested that many plants preferred that same soil. In addition, for the Clay County study area, sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) could be expressed in its own equation [14]. Sugar beets could grow in more saline, wet, poorly aerated, and poor-draining soils, such as those found in post-glacial lake bottoms, like in the Red River Valley of the north (the area of glacial Lake Agassiz, a lake that deposited up to 150 m of clay).
In 1993, Burley and Bauer reported two equations for Polk County, Florida [15]. Polk County is an area disturbed by massive phosphate mining, where reclamation soil productivity equations could be helpful. The post-mining landscape would be composed of groves of orange tree [Citrus x sinensis (L.) Osbeck] plantations, housing, and recreation open space containing wetlands. In the study, one equation was for mesic-seeking plants, and the other for hydric seeking vegetation. This led to the "Hydric Soil Vegetation Preference Theory." In the warm and wet subtropical areas of the United States, it appeared there were broadly two distinct groups of plants, preferring two different characteristics in soil profiles.
So far, only areas in the range of 300,000 to 400,000 hectares in size had been evaluated. In 1995, Burley reported the first multi-county model for Clay County Minnesota and Cass County, North Dakota [16]. A three-country model (over 1,000,000 hectares) was studied for the coal mining region of North Dakota, reporting various equations [17,18]. Practical spatial applications of the equations were reported in 1999 [19]. By 2001, a study reporting the relationship of these "softscape" soils (for vegetation) and "hardscape" soils (for buildings, roads and plazas) was explored, suggesting there were some types of soils that were suitable for both, but that most of these soils were exclusively useful for either softscapes or hardscapes [20]. These studies, along with practical planning and design illustrations for various land-uses, led to the publication of Environmental Design for Surface Mine Reclamation, a publication that earned state and national American Society of Landscape Architects awards [21]. Much of this early literature was published in conference proceedings in the surface mining reclamation arena, as this was the common academic venue for reporting this research by American academics. Over time, the emergence of reclamation journals, such as the America Society for Mining and Reclamation (now the American Society of Reclamation Sciences), and the scholarly drift towards and emphasis upon journal publication, has led to a different approach in reporting the results of these equations. Now, the same conference proceedings are published in their journal.
Slowly, equations for other counties across the eastern United States were reported. A French and American team reported an equation for Traverse County in Michigan, an area disturbed by recreational housing and general development [22]. Equations were reported for Chippewa County in Wisconsin (an area mined for silica sand to make glass) and for an area in Georgia (an area mined for sand and gravel and for kaolin clay) by a Chinese and American team [23,24]. These two studies supported similar equations, reinforcing the Mesic Preference Theory for mid-continent temperate areas with adequate moisture for vegetation.
Recently, another Chinese and American team reported upon equations in the coal mining regions of Montana, Wyoming and Colorado [25]. The study in Montana, Wyoming and Colorado revealed differences in the equations concerning high altitude and crop production in extremely cold and dry environments. The focus was still primarily on supporting surface mine reclamation, and the study was conducted primarily through the efforts of one American scientist, devoted to studying soil productivity equations, graduate students, and international scholars interested in the methodology, which earned the American scholar the American Society of Reclamation Sciences researcher of the year award. In surface mining reclamation circles, the research is well received and modestly known, but not widely pursued by others. Yet, as each region is studied and reported, it adds to the knowledge of the similarities and difference in soil productivity across the eastern 3/5ths of the United States.
There may be several reasons why the methodology may not yet be widely examined by others. First, the equations are lengthy and complex, introducing previously-unstudied relationships between soil properties. The statistical interactions of soil parameters that predict soil productivity may perplex investigators, and challenge normative beliefs concerning soil productivity. To validate and understand these equations and interactions may require additional research into growing crops in neo-soils, with many types of plants for up to 10 years. This type of commitment is not common. Most reported soil science reclamation investigations examine only a few properties, and one or two crops. Second, the methodology requires statistical techniques that are not abundantly found, nor applied in soil science, being much more widely employed in geography and the social sciences. Thirdly, the equations are region/county specific, and as yet have no universal applications or wide applicability. Finally, soil reclamation science in its essence has employed the practical stance of putting the best soils on the top layers, with less suitable soils lower in the profile, and completely unsuitable soils and substrate more than 1 m from the surface. From a practical standpoint, this seems "good enough" for regulators. This practical approach has led to the defunding of much of the reclamation research in the United States of America, as the problem is considered solved. However, as new knowledge is gained and examined, there is hope that these types of studies may reveal useful, previously unknown, unanticipated relationships.
Consequently, reporting on a series of equations across states and counties in the eastern 3/5ths of the United States of America is gradually leading to equations that may be more useful than those carried out county to county. Eventually, it may lead to broader universal equations for this portion of the United States [26]. So far, most of the studies have been in the American Midwest, the Great Plains, and the American Southeast. The study area for this investigation is in the south-west corner of this broader American region, a region with previously-unreported soil productivity equations.
Concurrently, much of the applied state-of-the art, concerning measures in soil reclamation for planning and design purposes, is reflected in a recent article by Humphries et al., examining soil metrics in Wales, United Kingdom, stressing the importance of vegetation-related assessments as opposed to soil measurements [27]. The emphasis remains on evaluating the capacity of the soil quickly and efficiently for bond release. Landscape metrics has become a popular term concerning the evaluation of sites for a variety of assessment programmatic criteria, such as for wildlife habitat, visual quality, water use, energy use and soil, in order to study planning and design alternatives [28,29]. For many investigations, usually the number of soil and vegetation types studied is limited, and the set of variables and variable combinations are often relatively small. Other recent efforts include a study in China by Duan et al. [30]. In the past, J.A. Rodrique and J.A. Burger have reported on metrics for forested land [31], and Barnhisel and Hower reported on an index for corn on agricultural lands [32]. Peng et al. explored soil productivity in a study area in China for several woody plant species [33], following concepts explored by James Burger (Virginia Tech University) and Richard Barnhisel (University of Kentucky) [31,32]. However, considering the number of soil series, locations and vegetation types around the world, the volume of literature is small, and conducted primarily by a few interconnected American researchers and those the Americans interact with internationally. Throughout the history of ideas, arts, and sciences, many inventions and ideas were quietly studied, explored and reported for decades before broad acceptance and adoption [26,34]. It may be possible that this line of research has not reached an end, and has not reached its potential peak in utility and application.
Investigators have explored other approaches to addressing soil productivity. For example, Burras et al. developed an index to assess soil productivity for corn production [35]. The index includes expert opinion and formula overrides. For example, urban land has a formula override, meaning that the land classification is assigned as unsuitable for corn production. In other words, the actual productivity of these disturbed soils cannot be assessed. The index was developed for the state of Iowa, a vast landscape where corn production is the predominant land-use. Much of the landscape and the soils in Iowa remain relatively undisturbed. Schaetzl et al. have produced a map of agricultural soil productivity for the lower 48 states in the USA [36]. The map is based upon the soil families' taxonomic levels of classification, for native soils. However, already, vast areas of some states (at the landscape scale), such as in northeastern Illinois (greater metropolitan Chicago), eastern Wyoming (coal Mining), western North Dakota (coal mining), southeastern Michigan (metropolitan Detroit), southwestern California (greater Los Angeles) or central Florida (phosphate mining), have extensive areas of highly disturbed soil profiles, that may not be reflective of the native parent soil's surface material, rendering a map based upon native soil profiles less reliable for large portions of the country. Numerous investigators, as illustrated by Voltr, have explored the prediction of harvest yield by combining soil parameters, climate, and agricultural practices; however, these approaches predict more than just the productivity potential of the soil [37]. Most of these approaches focus upon relatively undisturbed native soils.

Coryell County Study Area
The study area is Coryell County, Texas ( Figure 1) [38]. This county contains the Fort Hood Military Base, and within the county typical agricultural production includes cattle ranching, agronomy and pecan (Carya illinoinensis (Wangenh.) K. Koch) [38] production (Figures 2 and 3). At one time, this region was part of the Republic of Mexico, then part of an independent country, the Republic of Texas, finally becoming annexed by the United States of America. The county is named after James Coryell (1803-1837), a Texan war hero [38]. In the county, the summers are hot (over 38 • C; 100 degrees F.) and the winters cool (minimum temperature is −12 • C; 10 degrees F.), but not cold (very little snowfall), averaging 32.5 inches (82.55 cm) of rain each year [38]. The growing season is typical over 260 days [38]. Guretzky et al. studied the interaction between grazing and the impact of military vehicle disturbance within the military base upon soil productivity [39]. Soils in the study area can be calcareous. Hatter and Morgan reported on the growth of three maple trees [Acer rubrum var. Drummondii (Hook. and Arn. Ex Nutt) Sarg., Acer saccharum Marsh. Subsp. saccharum, and Acer saccharum subsp. grandidentatum (Nutt. Desmarais)] in woody draws within the county [40]. Woody plants in the region include: Juniperus ashei J. Buchholz, Quercus fusiformis Small, and Quercus texana Buckley [38]. The mesic prairie is dominated by Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash and Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash [41].
Sustainability 2020, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 6 of 15 extensive areas of highly disturbed soil profiles, that may not be reflective of the native parent soil's surface material, rendering a map based upon native soil profiles less reliable for large portions of the country. Numerous investigators, as illustrated by Voltr, have explored the prediction of harvest yield by combining soil parameters, climate, and agricultural practices; however, these approaches predict more than just the productivity potential of the soil [37]. Most of these approaches focus upon relatively undisturbed native soils.

Coryell County Study Area
The study area is Coryell County, Texas (Figure 1) [38]. This county contains the Fort Hood Military Base, and within the county typical agricultural production includes cattle ranching, agronomy and pecan (Carya illinoinensis (Wangenh.) K. Koch) [38] production (Figures 2 and 3). At one time, this region was part of the Republic of Mexico, then part of an independent country, the Republic of Texas, finally becoming annexed by the United States of America. The county is named after James Coryell (1803-1837), a Texan war hero [38]. In the county, the summers are hot (over 38 °C; 100 degrees F.) and the winters cool (minimum temperature is −12 °C; 10 degrees F.), but not cold (very little snowfall), averaging 32.5 inches (82.55 cm) of rain each year [38]. The growing season is typical over 260 days [38]. Guretzky et al. studied the interaction between grazing and the impact of military vehicle disturbance within the military base upon soil productivity [39]. Soils in the study area can be calcareous. Hatter and Morgan reported on the growth of three maple trees [Acer rubrum var. Drummondii (Hook. and Arn. Ex Nutt) Sarg., Acer saccharum Marsh. Subsp. saccharum, and Acer saccharum subsp. grandidentatum (Nutt. Desmarais)] in woody draws within the county [40]. Woody plants in the region include: Juniperus ashei J. Buchholz, Quercus fusiformis Small, and Quercus texana Buckley [38]. The mesic prairie is dominated by Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash and Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash [41].

Statistical Analysis
The

Statistical Analysis
The dependent variables are derived from vegetation yields in the county: wheat , it is possible to examine how the measurements of seemingly disparate variables (such as weight or volume per area or animal unit months) can be examined as a group. This was the statistical problem that Kendall had a solution to [7]. The procedure standardizes each variable, allowing the variables to be equitably compared. If all vegetation types in the investigation do not covary in productivity, then the investigator must develop individually derived productivity equations. If they do covary, a universal plant productivity equation may be generated that is suitable for many types of crops. The PCA multivariate statistical approach is useful in both natural resource and social science studies, and has been applied in other types of studies including social/cultural science studies [3,4,[41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48].
PCA facilitates the linear combination of productivity values to be combined through an equation to produce the dependent variable. With PCA, eigenvalues are produced (independent orthogonal dimensions). Typically, eigenvalues greater than 1.0 are considered to have the best potential for equation development. After the dependent variables are calculated through PCA, the independent soil variables, including main effects, squared terms and first order interaction terms, are applied in a regression study to determine the statistically best equation, that explains the largest variance while maintaining the set of regressors in the equation with a p-value equal to or less than 0.05. In this study 25 soil profiles were used in the analysis.
Li, He and Burley state: "In summary the process to conduct the research consists of measuring the properties of soil profiles and growing crops on these profile for approximately 10 years. Then employing a 40/30/20/10 depth weighting formula for each soil variable on each soil (independent variables). Next, use PCA to derive weighted linear combinations of plant yields/growth (dependent variable) across the soil profiles. Main effects, squared terms, and first order interaction terms are regressed to predict plant growth (Appendix A). The best predictor equations are those that explain the most variance without being over-specific, containing only significant variables (p ≤ 0.05)." [25]. The weighting formula examines four layers of the soil profile in increments of 30.48 cm to a depth of 1.2192 m. The average value for each variable within a specified layer is employed in the weighting formula." Table 1 presents the six eigenvalues from the principal component analysis. The first eigenvalue contains 82.9% of the variance, and is the only eigenvalue greater than 1.0. Table 2   In the regression analysis, Table 3 presents the best equation derived from the first principal component. The soil factors of water holding capacity, electrical conductivity and topographic position are present in the equation. The table suggests that in the study area, water and less salty soils are important determinants. The regression explained 95.63% of the variance, with an overall significance value of p < 0.0001. Equation (1) represents the model derived from the regression results.

Results
where: VP = vegetation productivity of the soil SL = percent slope AW = available water holding capacity HC = hydraulic conductivity OM = percent organic matter EC = electrical conductivity

Discussion
To assess the validity of the model, the predicted soil productivity values of three soils were computed and examined: Topsey Soil Series C, Crawford Soil Series B and Eckrant Soil Series B [38]. Topsey soil is a deep loamy soil residing in uplands, which forms in calcareous sediment with slopes ranging from 3% to 8%. The soil is moderately suited for cropland. It contains layers of marl and shale beneath the soil. Crawford soil is composed of silty clay on uplands. The characteristics of the soil vary, depending upon when it is very wet or extremely dry. It must be carefully managed, but is suitable for cropland. At deeper depths in the soil profile, one encounters fractured limestone. Eckrant soil is a shallow, cobbly clay overriding limestone. The soil is mainly used as rangeland and not suitable for crops. The Crawford soil from the three soils is considered the most suitable for crops, and the Eckrant soil the least suitable. When Equation (1) is applied to these soils, the Tosey soil scores 0.04. The Crawford soil scores 1.32, and the Eckrant soil scores −3.15. The scores reflect the expected relative productivity between the three soils. In other words, the equation [Equation (1)], approximates expected general productivity.
The soil can be employed as a guide in the reconstruction of disturbed soil, such as that along highways, military ranges and urban areas. The equation is a quick assessment of performance, as all of the variables can be measured within a day. The most time-consuming variable to measure is the percent organic matter, which involves drying and burning the organic matter away. Available water holding capacity is often a matter of managing the soil structure and the amount of organic matter in the soil. The relatively quick assessment of a soil's performance can be gleaned from the equation. Without the equation, it may take several years of crop production to assess a disturbed soil's productivity. Thus, the equation can save time. The equation is not the final authority or arbitrator concerning vegetation productivity, but it is a tool for gaining insight into the general productivity of a soil in the county, especially for disturbed soils where the productivity may be unknown. The key features of the equation suggest that, for Coryell County, it is important to consider that: • Modest slopes assist productivity; • Maximizing available water hold capacity is beneficial; • Quick internal drainage (hydraulic conductivity) of slopes is not beneficial; • Organic matter in the soil increases productivity unless the available water holding capacity is already high; • Increased organic matter tempers soil electric conductivity (salty soils).
The equation is consistent with many other reported equations containing main effect terms, square terms and interaction terms [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][23][24][25]. The variable percent slope appears to be a curvilinear responding variable (Figure 4). The equation suggests that flat slopes are not preferred. As the slope increases the productivity increases, until the square term for slope overtakes the main effects term for slope, and causes the productivity score to decrease. The relationship does not imply the optimum slope, as slope is also an interaction term with hydraulic conductivity and available water holding capacity. In addition, the model does not imply that the other variables employed in the study (but not in the equation) are insignificant predictors, but rather that the variables in Equation (1) represent the combination with the most predictive power from the group of variables studied.  The equation is consistent with many other reported equations containing main effect terms, square terms and interaction terms [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][23][24][25]. The variable percent slope appears to be a curvilinear responding variable (Figure 4). The equation suggests that flat slopes are not preferred. As the slope increases the productivity increases, until the square term for slope overtakes the main effects term for slope, and causes the productivity score to decrease. The relationship does not imply the optimum slope, as slope is also an interaction term with hydraulic conductivity and available water holding capacity. In addition, the model does not imply that the other variables employed in the study (but not in the equation) are insignificant predictors, but rather that the variables in Equation (1) represent the combination with the most predictive power from the group of variables studied.
The value of this type of equation-building could be increased if productivity values for woody plants were added to the database, as this would be more useful for disturbed urban areas. Since pecans are grown in the county, it would have been helpful to have pecan productivity data to add to a modeling study. The study area has a limited number of soils to study. Often, counties that contain more soils for modeling, such as 50 to 60 soils, yield more reliable results. Still, an all-crop model was possible to build. Specific models for the second (specific rangeland model) and third (a cotton lint model) principal components may require more observations sets. When constructing a rangeland model, the amount of variance explained was low. When the cotton lint model was exposed to application of the cotton lint equation, the results did not co-vary with measured results, rendering the model nonsensical. The value of this type of equation-building could be increased if productivity values for woody plants were added to the database, as this would be more useful for disturbed urban areas. Since pecans are grown in the county, it would have been helpful to have pecan productivity data to add to a modeling study. The study area has a limited number of soils to study. Often, counties that contain more soils for modeling, such as 50 to 60 soils, yield more reliable results. Still, an all-crop model was possible to build. Specific models for the second (specific rangeland model) and third (a cotton lint model) principal components may require more observations sets. When constructing a rangeland model, the amount of variance explained was low. When the cotton lint model was exposed to application of the cotton lint equation, the results did not co-vary with measured results, rendering the model nonsensical.
The relationship of these models to sustainability issues is especially pertinent when one examines landscape disturbance. As the planet's population increases, much of the landscape is converted from native soils to highly disturbed and reconstructed soils. County soil surveys describing only native soils will become less useful, and new methods of soil description and assessment may be necessary. In Coryell County, Texas, the installation of an armed services testing range is an example. This is a land-use disturbance that is different to mining, and illustrates the breadth and diversity of landscape disturbances. The equation reported in this study can be applied to study the post-disturbance productivity of the soil, and aid in suggesting the properties that require modification in order to increase and maintain post-disturbance productivity.
As more of the planet's landscape becomes disturbed by human activity, new measures to assess soil productivity may be required for the landscape fabric of urban savanna and emerging landscape urbanism [49]. Relatively little of the sustainability literature is focused on the soil, it being more focused upon buildings, business economics, supporting human cultures, protecting wildlife, air and water, and maintaining the integrity of native environments. The rise of sustainability as a scholarly topic may suggest a new direction for neo-soil productivity model applications and soil assessment, and give new life to a topic that has been relatively under-studied, despite a long history dating back to at least M. Kendall in 1939 [7].
The equation reported in this study will be added to the results from other reported models. Eventually, a model that considers location in the eastern 3/5ths of the United States (from Texas to Montana, to Maine and down to Florida) may be possible to construct, presenting a universal model to predict plant productivity for disturbed and reconstructed soils. Investigators around the world are encouraged to initiate and develop neo-soil metrics for their part of the world, in order to create a sustainable environment. There is an abundance of opportunities around the world in this general area of research. In 1864, George Perkins Marsh wrote about managing soil resources and the downfall of ancient civilizations [50]. As more land across the planet is being disturbed, managing these resources for sustainable purposes is just as relevant today. Being able to predict and guide the soil productivity of these disturbed soils is a contributor to, and possibly a foundation of, sustainable solutions and success at the most fundamental level. In the future, as native soils disappear, the authors of this study could imagine a forthcoming time where soil science and soil testing firms and experts would be employed to evaluate non-native, highly disturbed soils by measuring the soil profiles metrically, applying an equation, and producing a productivity number for a broad palette of vegetation types. While large portions of the landscape may no longer contain native soils, predicting, managing and maintaining soil productivity will remain important steps in creating a sustainable environment. New/evolving methods may be necessary to predict soil productivity.

Acknowledgments:
The authors wish to thank Gerald Colter from the NRCS, Gatesville, Texas for supplying the images of the county.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.