Distribution characteristics of soil moisture and temperature under different land use types in the deep profile of loess area in northern Shaanxi, China.

Ying Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao

State Key Laboratory of Soil Erosion and Dryland Farming on the Loess Plateau, Institute of Soil and Water Conservation, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Ministry of Water Resources, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, China.

Published: September 2024

Understanding the effects of different land use modes on the spatial and temporal variations of soil moisture and temperature in the deep profile and revealing the regulatory effects of various vegetation covers on regional water and heat resources can provide a theoretical basis for the optimization of land management and vegetation restoration. Taking the advantage of different land use patterns in the Liudaogou watershed in the northern part of Loess Plateau, we monitored soil moisture content as well as temperature in the 0-1000 cm soil layer in 2022 to analyze the temporal variation and vertical profile distribution characteristics of soil moisture and temperature under four land use modes (woodland, grassland, farmland, and wild grassland). The results showed that soil moisture and temperature distributions varied significantly across different land use types. In the growing season (April-October), total soil water storage in the 0-1000 cm soil layer of the four land use types, in a descending order, was as follows: soybean farmland (1393 mm), wild grassland (1374 mm), forest (1218 mm), and alfalfa grassland (557 mm). Soil moisture of forest and soybean farmland changed obviously in the 0-300 cm soil layer, and that of wild grassland and alfalfa grassland was in 0-500 and 0-200 cm soil layers, respectively, while soil moisture of deep soil layers fluctuated little. The impact of land use modes on soil temperature was primarily manifested in the 0-200 cm soil layer, and the depth was up to 300 cm. The depth of precipitation infiltration replenishment of the four land use modes was approximately 200 cm. The depth of soil moisture depletion was 200 cm in both forest and alfalfa grassland, and was 100 cm in soybean farmland and wild grassland. Soil hydrothermal processes in the deep profile varied across vegetation types.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.13287/j.1001-9332.202409.019DOI Listing

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