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Hysteresis in soil hydraulic conductivity as driven by salinity and sodicity - a modeling framework | Soil and Water Sciences

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Hysteresis in soil hydraulic conductivity as driven by salinity and sodicity - a modeling framework

Citation:

Kramer, I. ; Bayer, Y. ; Adeyemo, T. ; Mau, Y. . Hysteresis In Soil Hydraulic Conductivity As Driven By Salinity And Sodicity - A Modeling Framework. HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES 2021, 25, 1993-2008.

Date Published:

APR 14

Abstract:

Declining soil-saturated hydraulic conductivity (K-s) as a result of saline and sodic irrigation water is a major cause of soil degradation. While it is understood that the mechanisms that lead to degradation can cause irreversible changes in K-s, existing models do not account for hysteresis between the degradation and rehabilitation processes. We develop the first model for the effect of saline and sodic water on K-s that explicitly includes hysteresis. As such, the idea that a soil's history of degradation and rehabilitation determines its future K-s lies at the center of this model. By means of a ``weight'' function, the model accounts for soil-specific differences, such as clay content. The weight function also determines the form of the hysteresis curves, which are not restricted to a single shape, as in some existing models for irreversible soil processes. The concept of the weight function is used to develop a reversibility index, which allows for the quantitative comparison of different soils and their susceptibility to irreversible degradation. We discuss the experimental setup required to find a soil's weight function and show how the weight function determines the degree to which K-s is reversible for a given soil. We demonstrate the feasibility of this procedure by presenting experimental results show-casing the presence of hysteresis in soil K-s and using these results to calculate a weight function. Past experiments and models on the decline of K-s due to salinity and sodicity focus on degradation alone, ignoring any characterization of the degree to which declines in K-s are reversible. Our model and experimental results emphasize the need to measure ``reversal curves'', which are obtained from rehabilitation measurements following mild declines in K-s. The developed model has the potential to significantly improve our ability to assess the risk of soil degradation by allowing for the consideration of how the accumulation of small degradation events can cause significant land degradation.

Last updated on 12/19/2021