Effect of Long-Term Semiarid Pasture Management on Soil Hydraulic and Thermal Properties
2023
Geeta Kharel | Madhav Dhakal | Sanjit K. Deb | Lindsey C. Slaughter | Catherine Simpson | Charles P. West
Semiarid pasture management strategies can affect soil hydraulic and thermal properties that determine water fluxes and storage, and heat flow in unsaturated soils. We evaluated long-term (>10 years) perennial and annual semiarid pasture system effects on saturated hydraulic conductivity (<i>k<sub>s</sub></i>), soil water retention curves (SWRCs), soil water thresholds (i.e., volumetric water content (θ<sub>v</sub>) at saturation, field capacity (FC), and permanent wilting point (PWP); plant available water (PAW)), thermal conductivity (<i>λ</i>), and diffusivity (<i>D<sub>t</sub></i>) within the 0–20 cm soil depth. Forage systems included: Old World bluestem (<i>Bothriochloa bladhii</i>) + legumes (predominantly alfalfa (<i>Medicago sativa</i>)) (OWB-legume), native grass-mix (native), alfalfa + tall wheatgrass (<i>Thinopyrum ponticum</i>) (alfalfa-TW), and annual grass-mix (annual) pastures on a clay loam soil; and native, teff (<i>Eragrostis tef</i>), OWB-grazed, and OWB-ungrazed pastures on a sandy clay loam soil. The perennial OWB-legume and native pastures had increased soil organic matter (SOM) and reduced bulk density (<i>ρ</i><sub>b</sub>), improving <i>k<sub>s</sub></i>, soil water thresholds, <i>λ</i>, and <i>D<sub>t</sub></i>, compared to annual teff and alfalfa-TW (<i>P</i> < 0.05). Soil <i>λ</i>, but not <i>D<sub>t</sub></i>, increased with increasing θ<sub>v</sub>. Grazed pastures decreased <i>k<sub>s</sub></i> and water retention compared to other treatments (<i>P</i> < 0.05), yet did not affect <i>λ</i> and <i>D<sub>t</sub></i> (<i>P</i> > 0.05), likely due to higher <i>ρ</i><sub>b</sub> and contact between particles. Greater <i>λ</i> and <i>D<sub>t</sub></i> at saturation and PWP in perennial versus annual pastures may be attributed to differing SOM and <i>ρ</i><sub>b</sub>, and some a priori differences in soil texture. Overall, our results suggest that perennial pasture systems are more beneficial than annual systems for soil water storage and heat movement in semiarid regions.
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