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Soil water repellency in a Japanese cypress plantation restricts increases in soil water storage during rainfall events

✍ Scribed by Masahiro Kobayashi; Takanori Shimizu


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
448 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6087

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Forest soils in Japan are often water repellent. Substantial water repellency frequently occurs and impedes water infiltration into the soil matrix, but continuous overland flow is not necessarily observed because forest soils usually have macropores through which the water can enter the subsoil. Although this flow pattern may influence the manner of water storage in forest soils at the solum scale, field evidence has not yet indicated this process. We monitored soil water storage during natural rainfall events in a 60‐cm deep solum using time domain reflectometry (TDR) moisture sensors, and observed stained flow patterns in the soil following simulated rainfall containing a colour dye, on a slope planted with Japanese cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa). The surface soil at the research plot exhibited strong water repellency at water contents lower than the threshold critical water content of 0·29 m^3^ m^−3^. Under dry antecedent moisture conditions, increases in soil water storage were small compared to the cumulative rainfall, despite the low wetness of the soil matrix. In contrast, under moderate moisture conditions, increases in the water content corresponded to the cumulative rainfall. Under dry conditions, rainwater may have entered the subsoil at a few limited locations connected with continuous vertical macropores, such as decayed root channels or interstructural voids. Therefore, the water seemed to bypass a large part of the soil matrix away from the macropores. Such preferential water flow was confirmed by the stained flow patterns after the rainfall simulation. The flow patterns visualized by the dye were discontinuous and scattered under dry conditions and diffuse under moderate moisture conditions. Repellency induced preferential flow led to restricted increases in solum scale water storage during rainfall events, reflecting a physical nonequilibrium in soil water storage. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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Surface runoff as affected by soil water
✍ Shusuke Miyata; Ken'ichirou Kosugi; Takashi Gomi; Yuichi Onda; Takahisa Mizuyama 📂 Article 📅 2007 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 511 KB

## Abstract Recent studies have suggested that soil water repellency can be one of the important factors affecting hydrological processes on headwater catchments. In Japan, water repellency is known to occur under Japanese cypress (__Chamaecyparis obtusa__) forests, a typical plantation type in Jap