6 results

BEYOND THE “LEAST LIMITING WATER RANGE”: RETHINKING SOIL PHYSICS RESEARCH IN BRAZIL

Quirijn de Jong van Lier, Paulo Ivonir Gubiani

01/Jul/2015

As opposed to objective definitions in soil physics, the subjective term “soil physical quality” is increasingly found in publications in the soil physics area. A supposed indicator of soil physical quality that has been the focus of attention, especially in the Brazilian literature, is the Least Limiting Water Range (RLL), translated in Portuguese as “Intervalo Hídrico Ótimo” or IHO. In this paper the four limiting water contents that define RLL are discussed in the light of objectively determinable soil physical […]

Plant-available soil water capacity: estimation methods and implications

Bruno Montoani Silva, Érika Andressa da Silva, Geraldo César de Oliveira, Mozart Martins Ferreira, Milson Evaldo Serafim

01/Apr/2014

The plant-available water capacity of the soil is defined as the water content between field capacity and wilting point, and has wide practical application in planning the land use. In a representative profile of the Cerrado Oxisol, methods for estimating the wilting point were studied and compared, using a WP4-T psychrometer and Richards chamber for undisturbed and disturbed samples. In addition, the field capacity was estimated by the water content at 6, 10, 33 kPa and by the inflection point […]

Water retention and availability in soils of the State of Santa Catarina-Brazil: effect of textural classes, soil classes and lithology

André da Costa, Jackson Adriano Albuquerque, Adriano da Costa, Patricia Pértile, Franciani Rodrigues da Silva

01/Dec/2013

The retention and availability of water in the soil vary according to the soil characteristics and determine plant growth. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate water retention and availability in the soils of the State of Santa Catarina, Brazil, according to the textural class, soil class and lithology. The surface and subsurface horizons of 44 profiles were sampled in different regions of the State and different cover crops to determine field capacity, permanent wilting point, available water […]

Pedotransfer functions to estimate retention and availability of water in soils of the state of Santa Catarina, Brazil

André da Costa, Jackson Adriano Albuquerque, Jaime Antônio de Almeida, Adriano da Costa, Rodrigo Vieira Luciano

01/Aug/2013

Studies on water retention and availability are scarce for subtropical or humid temperate climate regions of the southern hemisphere. The aims of this study were to evaluate the relations of the soil physical, chemical, and mineralogical properties with water retention and availability for the generation and validation of continuous point pedotransfer functions (PTFs) for soils of the State of Santa Catarina (SC) in the South of Brazil. Horizons of 44 profiles were sampled in areas under different cover crops and […]

The efficiency of different estimation methods of hydro-physical limits

Emma María Martínez, Tomas Serafín Cuesta, Javier José Cancela

01/Dec/2012

The soil water available to crops is defined by specific values of water potential limits. Underlying the estimation of hydro-physical limits, identified as permanent wilting point (PWP) and field capacity (FC), is the selection of a suitable method based on a multi-criteria analysis that is not always clear and defined. In this kind of analysis, the time required for measurements must be taken into consideration as well as other external measurement factors, e.g., the reliability and suitability of the study […]

Pedotransfer functions for the prediction of moisture retention and specific potentials in soils of Pernambuco state (Brazil)

L. B. Oliveira, M. R. Ribeiro, P. K. T. Jacomine, J. J. V. Rodrigues, F. A. Marques

01/Jun/2002

Pedotransfer functions are equations used to estimate soil properties of difficult determination, based on other, more easily obtained soil properties. In spite of the considerable number of equations available to predict moisture retention to specific matrix potentials, these should not be used indiscriminatley,since most of them were developed in temperate climate soils, using data obtained by method that differ from the ones used in Brazilian laboratories. The objectives of this study were: (a) to develop pedotransference functions to estimate water […]