2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Monitoring the Soil Water Potential with Polymer Tensiometers in Cropped Lysimeters under Water-Stressed Conditions.

661-9 Monitoring the Soil Water Potential with Polymer Tensiometers in Cropped Lysimeters under Water-Stressed Conditions.



Tuesday, 7 October 2008: 11:15 AM
George R. Brown Convention Center, 362F
Martine Van der Ploeg, Harm Gooren, Gerben Bakker and Gerrit de Rooij, Atlasgebouw Building 104 PO Box 47, Wageningen University & Research Centre, Wageningen University, Droevendaalsesteeg 4, Wageningen, 6709 PA, Netherlands
More frequent and intense droughts due to global climate change, together with an increasing agricultural water use emphasize the importance of understanding root water uptake under water-stressed conditions. While root water uptake is driven by potential gradients, measurement of soil water potentials was limited by the measurement range of water-filled tensiometers (-0.085 MPa). A recently developed polymer tensiometer (POT) can measure soil water potentials down to -1.6 MPa. Monitoring low soil water potentials in the presence of root water uptake may help gain knowledge of a plant’s strategy to cope with water stress, and allows improved determination of local water stress levels in experiments.

To investigate plant strategies that cope with water stress, soil water potentials (pm) were measured in the vicinity of maize roots in three lysimeters. The lysimeters received different irrigation amounts: an optimal irrigation gift (-0.05 < pm < -0.02 MPa) and minimized irrigation to create moderate (minimum pm = -0.45 MPa) and severe (minimum pm = -0.80 MPa) water stress.

Measured soil water potentials showed that the water stressed plants started to take up water from deeper soil layers, and continued to take up water under very dry conditions.