Title of article :
Evaluation of pedotransfer functions for predicting water retention of soils in Lower Congo (D.R. Congo)
Author/Authors :
Alan Botula، نويسنده , , W.M. Cornelis، نويسنده , , R. S. G. Baert، نويسنده , , E. Van Ranst، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
The soil water retention curve (SWRC) is important to solve many soil and water management problems related to agriculture, ecology, and environmental issues. However, it is well recognized that its direct measurement is laborious, time-consuming and expensive. An alternative is the estimation of the SWRC by pedotransfer functions (PTFs), which are well documented for temperate soils. Few works, however, have been devoted to PTFs for tropical soils. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of a number of published “point” and “parametric” PTFs to predict water retention of soils in the Lower Congo (the South-Western region of the Democratic Republic of Congo). The “point” PTFs of and performed best at −33 kPa, while those of and were best at −1500 kPa. Regarding the parametric PTFs which predicted the parameters, the “tropical” PTFs of and the “temperate” PTFs of gave the best results. Preliminary results of this evaluation study suggest that estimates of water content by several existing “temperate” as well as “tropical” PTFs may induce errors in the outputs of watershed models used in various agricultural studies under the humid tropics. Large discrepancies in the derived soil hydraulic data can substantially reduce the quality of the modelling results particularly in regions where soils may have been formed and evolved in similar climatological and pedological conditions as soils from the Lower Congo. We further found that a predictor such as dithionite-citrate-bicarbonateextractable iron (DCB-Fe) has great potential to reduce the uncertainty of PTFs for predicting water retention parameters of tropical soils.
Keywords :
Humid tropics , Dithionite-citrate-bicarbonateextractable iron , Soil water management models , Hydraulic properties , Highly weathered soils
Journal title :
Agricultural Water Management
Journal title :
Agricultural Water Management