Investigating plant root effects on soil electrical conductivity: An integrated field monitoring and statistical modelling approach |
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Authors: | Jun-Jun Ni Yi-Feng Cheng Sanandam Bordoloi Himashree Bora Qin-Hua Wang Charles-Wang-Wai Ng Ankit Garg |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Shantou University, Guangdong, China;3. Department of Biosciences and bioengineering, IIT, Guwahati, India |
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Abstract: | Plants have been shown to affect soil water content and temperature. Previous studies were conducted mainly in forestry and agricultural soils, where conditions of soil and vegetation are different from those in an urban landscape. In an urban landscape, the influence of plant roots on electrical conductivity, soil water content and temperature is still not clear. This study aims to investigate the effects of soil water content and temperature on electrical conductivity in vegetated soils through an integrated field monitoring and computational modelling approach. A new relationship between soil electrical conductivity and water content as well as temperature is proposed. Field monitoring was conducted in both vegetated (tree species) and bare soils. The monitoring included measurements of soil water content, soil temperature and soil electrical conductivity. This was followed by response surface regression modelling. Measured results show that soil temperature at shallow depths was lower in vegetated soil than that in the bare soil. This observation was also consistent with the higher soil water content and hence, higher electrical conductivity under tree canopy. The model developed could predict nonlinear relationships between electrical conductivity and soil temperature and water content. Uncertainty analysis indicated normal distribution for electrical conductivity under variation of soil temperature and water content. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | plant roots soil temperature soil water content soil electrical conductivity surface response regression |
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