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Quick Methods for Determining Plant Available Water

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Presentation on theme: "Quick Methods for Determining Plant Available Water"— Presentation transcript:

1 Quick Methods for Determining Plant Available Water
Gaylon S. Campbell, Ph. D. Decagon Devices, Inc. Pullman, WA

2 Volume Fractions: a “Typical” Soil at Field Capacity
Field capacity or Drained upper limit Air 24% Plant Available Water 13% Unavailable Water 13% Permanent wilt point or lower limit Solid 50%

3 Our Task Demonstrate a quick method for determining plant available water by Showing how to find the -1.5 MPa water content of a soil sample Showing how to find the -33 kPa water content of a soil

4 Water Potential Measurement in the Dry Range (for PWP)
WP4 Dew Point Potentiameter Range is to -300 MPa Accuracy is 0.1 MPa Read time is 5 minutes or less

5 Chilled Mirror Dew Point
Cool mirror until dew forms Detect dew optically Measure mirror temperature Measure sample temperature with IR thermometer Water potential is approximately linearly related to Ts - Td Fan Optical Sensor Mirror Infrared Sensor Sample

6 Water Potential Measurement in the Wet Range (for FC)
Equilibrates water under tension with soil water through a porous cup Measures pressure of water Highest accuracy, but limited range (0 to -70 kPa)

7 Steps for Quick -1.5 MPa Water Content
Air dry, crush and sieve the soil sample Determine the soil texture Find the approximate -1.5 MPa and air dry water content for that texture Calculate the amount of water to add

8 Steps Continued Add water, mix and equilibrate
Measure water potential and water content Compute -1.5 MPa water content Convert to volumetric water content

9 Texture w-1.5 (g/g) wad Sand 0.008 0.003 loamy sand 0.015 0.005 sandy loam 0.045 sandy clay loam 0.143 0.048 Loam 0.106 0.035 sandy clay 0.204 0.068 silt loam 0.098 0.033 Silt 0.075 0.025 clay loam 0.174 0.058 silty clay loam 0.166 0.055 silty clay Clay 0.234 0.078

10 How Much Water to Add Silt loam soil: w-1.5 = 0.098 g/g
wad = g/g 50 g. sample Add 3.15 ml. of water to 50 g of air dry soil

11 Reading the Water Potential
Insert sample Seal chamber Wait 3-5 min. and read the result

12 Computing the -1.5 MPa Water Content
Wm = 0.109 m = -1.01

13 Convert to Volumetric Water Content
Probes measure volumetric wc Soil stores in terms of volumetric wc If bulk density were 1.4 g/cm3

14 Quick Determination of the -33 kPa Water Content
Do it in the field or take field samples after heavy rain or irrigation Measure water potential with a tensiometer Measure water content with a probe (volumetric) Calculate -33 kPa water content

15 Measuring Water Potential
Remove cap from tensiometer Insert the probe and read

16 Water Content with EC-5 and Echo Check

17 Extrapolating to get the -33 kPa water content

18 b values for Soils Texture b Sand 1.6 loamy sand 2.7 sandy loam 3.7
sandy clay loam 7.7 Loam 5.5 sandy clay 11 silt loam 5 Silt 4.1 clay loam 8.4 silty clay loam silty clay 9.7 Clay 12.6

19 Calculating the -33 kPa water content
Assume Sandy loam Water potential reading is -18 kPa Water content reading is 0.25 m3 m-3

20 Conclusions Upper and lower limits for plant available water are soil specific They are approximated by the -33 kPa and -1.5 MPa water contents Quick methods for determining these values are available

21 Conclusions The -1.5 MPa water content is found by measuring water content and potential on a sample near -1.5 MPa and extrapolating The -33 kPa water content is found by measuring water content and potential on a sample near -33 kPa and extrapolating


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