Abstract Tillage practices have a profound impact on soil structure and soil hydrology, which may affect ecosystem functions like plant productivity. There is an ongoing debate whether a conversion from… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Tillage practices have a profound impact on soil structure and soil hydrology, which may affect ecosystem functions like plant productivity. There is an ongoing debate whether a conversion from conventional tillage (CT) to no-till (NT) leads to an increase in (near-)saturated hydraulic conductivity. This is because true effects are often disguised by large spatial and temporal variability, but also by the deficiencies in the measurement technique. In this paper, we measured (near-) saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks and K-2) in a long-term tillage trial (26 years) in Germany with three different methods: hood infiltrometer (HI) in the field, tension disc infiltrometer (TI) on undisturbed soil cores and direct simulation (DS) of water flow on X-ray CT images of macropore structure in these soil cores with a Stokes-Brinkmann solver. On average the absolute values varied by two orders of magnitude in the order TI The pore metric with highest predictive power (>90%) on simulated Ks in NT soil cores was the critical pore diameter because it represents the bottleneck that restricts a large contribution to flow by elongated biopores. However, in plowed soil (CT) pore metrics that best describe flow through the loose soil matrix, like macroporosity and pore connectivity, have a higher predictive power and the critical pore diameter is rendered meaningless. The relative importance of various pore metrics as good predictors of hydraulic conductivity does not only change in a very small pressure range (Ks vs. K-2) but also between measurement techniques (HI vs. TI vs. DS). These inconsistencies raise the question if and how existing pedo-transfer functions for estimating (near-) saturated hydraulic conductivities can be extended by image-derived pore metrics in a meaningful way.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.