Impact of various soil hydraulic properties and water source-sink relations on plant rings formation and sizes under arid conditions

Author(s):  
Ofir Katz ◽  
Yair Herooty ◽  
Pua Bar (Kutiel) ◽  
Hezi Yizhaq

<p>In semi-arid and arid environments, clonal plants occasionally appear in ring patterns with a barren soil centre. There is a general agreement that this pattern forms when ramets grow radially, leaving a dead centre where the parent plant once was. Nevertheless, there is still some controversy over the nature of water source-sink relations in and around the rings, and the mechanism that drive the ring formation. We studied Asphodelus ramosus rings in two sites with different soil types (sand and loess) but comparable climate, in order to understand whether differences in soil hydraulic properties create different water source-sink relations and mechanisms that drive ring formation. We characterised soil hydraulic properties and dynamics along the rainy season and during the dry season, accompanied by measurements of soil texture and of belowground storage root biomass. We found that the nature of source-sink relations varies with soil type and properties. In sandy soils, water supply to ring perimeters is mainly from their centre. In loessial soils, water supply to ring perimeters is mainly from the surrounding matrix. Consequently, rings are larger in sandy soils than in loessial soils, in each case in order to optimise water source area. Therefore, studying the formation of rings and other vegetation spatial patterns should consider local soil properties and the possibility that similar patterns may emerge through various mechanisms.</p>

2002 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 57 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Young ◽  
A. Karagunduz ◽  
J. Šimůnek ◽  
K. D. Pennell

Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1169
Author(s):  
Long Thanh Bui ◽  
Yasushi Mori

If soil hydraulic conductivity or water holding capacity could be measured with a small volume of samples, it would benefit international fields where researchers can only carry a limited amount of soils out of particular regions. We performed a pinhole multistep centrifuge outflow method on three types of soil, which included granite decomposed soil (Masa soil), volcanic ash soil (Andisol soil), and alluvial clayey soil (paddy soil). The experiment was conducted using 2 mL and 15 mL centrifuge tubes in which pinholes were created on the top and bottom for air intrusion and outflow, respectively. Water content was measured at 5, 15, and 30 min after applying the centrifuge to examine the equilibrium time. The results showed that pinhole drainage worked well for outflow, and 15 or 30 min was sufficient to obtain data for each step. Compared with equilibrium data, the retention curve was successfully optimized. Although the curve shape was similar, unsaturated hydraulic conductivities deviated largely, which implied that Ks caused convergence issues. When Ks was set as a measured constant, the unsaturated hydraulic properties converged well and gave excellent results. This method can provide soil hydraulic properties of regions where soil sampling is limited and lacks soil data.


2021 ◽  
Vol 593 ◽  
pp. 125890
Author(s):  
Xiaoxian Zhang ◽  
Andrew L. Neal ◽  
John W. Crawford ◽  
Aurelie Bacq-Labreuil ◽  
Elsy Akkari ◽  
...  

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