ESTIMATION OF MANITOBA SOIL TEMPERATURES FROM ATMOSPHERIC METEOROLOGICAL MEASUREMENTS

Abstract
Soil-temperature studies were conducted under forage and zero tillage conditions at the Whiteshell Nuclear Research Establishment (WNRE), Pinawa, Manitoba, as part of the plant radiation ecology research program. The objective was to develop estimation equations for monthly mean and daily mean soil surface temperatures from atmospheric meteorological measurements. Subsoil temperatures were estimated from predicted soil surface temperatures by applying an appropriate damping factor. Monthly mean soil surface temperatures were estimated for summer and winter months from regression equations with meteorological predictors. Daily mean soil surface temperatures were predicted from regression equations with meteorological predictors combined with best-fit Fournier-series seasonal curves. Daily mean subsoil temperatures at 10 cm were estimated from predicted soil surface temperatures by applying an appropriate damping factor. The standard deviation of the difference between predicted and observed temperatures was generally less than 1 °C for daily and monthly estimates. A good estimate of the seasonal subsoil temperature at 10, 50, 100 and 200 cm was found from a periodic function with damping and phase paramaters. The explained variance was 95% or more. With appropriate assumptions regarding soil thermal properties and mean annual soil temperature, accurate results were obtained quickly and economically.

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