Twenty four soil moisture multi-sensor capacitance probes were installed to monitor water content across a 6 ha area at the USDA-ARS OPE3 site in Beltsville, MD. These probes were located at depths of 10, 30, 50, 80, 120, 150, and 180 cm and were monitored every 10 min for 610 days. To quantify the temporal persistence, hourly average water contents were computed for all probe readings at one depth. Then the relative water contents were computed as ratios of the individual-probe water content measurement to the average water contents at that same depth (e.g. 10 cm depth). Based on these calculations, it appeared that the temporal persistence of soil-water contents was well pronounced at certain probe locations, and distributions of relative water content covered narrow ranges. Mean relative water contents were used to estimate missing data or correct erroneous sensor readings, thus substantially reducing uncertainty in average water content across the study area. Relative water contents also enabled identifying a representative location and reducing the number of sensors needed to obtain a specified accuracy of the average water content estimates. One month of soil moisture monitoring was found sufficient to evaluate distributions of the relative water contents and thus to characterize temporal persistence. Utilizing temporal persistence was a useful means to upscale water content from point measurements to the field scale and reduce uncertainty in soil water content monitoring.
Keywords: soil water content monitoring, temporal persistence, water content upscaling, field scale
Back to 1.1A Hydropedology: Fundamental Issues and Practical Applications - Theater I
Back to WCSS
Back to The 18th World Congress of Soil Science (July 9-15, 2006)