2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): How to Measure Low Matric Potentials with a Combination of Water-Filled Tensiometers and Porous-Matrix Sensors.

661-8 How to Measure Low Matric Potentials with a Combination of Water-Filled Tensiometers and Porous-Matrix Sensors.



Tuesday, 7 October 2008: 11:00 AM
George R. Brown Convention Center, 362F
W. Richard Whalley, Soil Science, Rothamsted Research, West Common, Harpenden,, St Albans, AL5 2JQ, United Kingdom, Christopher W. Watts, Soil Science, Rothamsted Research, West Common, Harpenden, St Albans, AL5 2JQ, United Kingdom, Gary Lock, Delta-T Devices,, 130 Low Road, Burwell, Cambridge, CB25 OEJ, United Kingdom, Dick Jenkins, Delta-T Devices, Ltd, Cambridge, United Kingdom and Jos Balendonck, Plant Research International B.V., PO Box 16, 6700 AA Wageningen, Bornsesteeg 65,, Wageningen,, 6708 PD, Netherlands

Measurement of the matric potential of soil water is central to almost all studies of water movement and plant stress responses. However, in comparison with advances made in the measurement of soil water content, there has been slow progress in the development of improved methods to measure matric potential. A constraint on the improved measurement of matric potential has been the physical limits to the use of the water-filled tensiometer (typically -100kPa), the sensor preferred by many scientists. However, recently there have been two exciting developments. Firstly, the extension of the range of the water-filled tensiometer is starting to be implemented in commercially available sensors. Take and Bolton (2003) have shown how the complete saturation of a water-filled tensiometer will allow matric potentials more negative than -100kPa to be measured. In a second and unrelated development, more reliable porous matrix sensors have been designed and implemented in a research environment. This paper has two objectives: 1) to explore the use of water-filled tensiometers with an extended range (i.e. matric potentials more negative than -100 kPa), and 2) to compare the use of porous matrix sensors with water-filled tensiometers. We present a number of important conclusions relevant to both the use of water-filled and porous matrix sensors. We show that the practice of refilling water-filled tensiometers, in drying soils, will lead to poor data sets and a loss in information. We also show that porous matrix sensors have the capability to give considerably more reliable information on matric potentials in the root zone.

This work was part funded by the European Union project 036958 “FlowAid”.

Take, W.A. & Bolton, M.D. 2003. Géotechnique, 53, 159–172.

See more of: Soil Moisture: Advances in Design and Development of Water Content, Matric Potential, and Flux Measurement Methods for the Critical Zone: I
See more of: S01 Soil Physics