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Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 6, 1043-1051, 2002
www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/6/1043/2002/
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Simple sensors to achieve fine spatial resolution in continuous measurements of soil moisture and salinity

F. Konukcu1, J. W. Gowing2, and D. A. Rose2
1Trakya Universitesi, Tekirdag Ziraat Fakultesi, 59030 Tekirdag, Turkey
2School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK
Email for corresponding author: J.W.Gowing@ncl.ac.uk

Abstract. It is increasingly necessary to be able to measure, simultaneously, continuously and at fine spatial resolution, the salinity and water content of soil. This paper reports the design, construction, calibration and laboratory testing of two simple but robust instruments that enable this to be achieved. Salinity in solution was measured reliably, at 10-mm spacing, by multi-electrode resistivity probes up to saturation with NaCl (c. 6 mol l–1), though these probes required individual calibration and were unable to detect precipitated salt. Volumetric water content was measured with great sensitivity over a wide range, from air-dryness (0.06 m3m–3) to saturation (0.55 m3m–3) in a sandy loam, using thermal-conductivity probes that used a common calibration and were unaffected by the salinity of the soil solution, by temperature and by ageing.

Keywords: soil moisture, soil salinity, thermal-conductivity moisture probe, four-electrode salinity probe



Final Revised Paper (PDF, 1864 KB)

Citation: Konukcu, F., Gowing, J. W., and Rose, D. A.: Simple sensors to achieve fine spatial resolution in continuous measurements of soil moisture and salinity, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 6, 1043-1051, 2002.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager