CHARACTERIZATION OF SOIL AERATION IN SITU WITH AUTOMATED OXYGEN DIFFUSION MEASUREMENTS
- 1 November 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Soil Science
- Vol. 122 (5) , 271-281
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00010694-197611000-00005
Abstract
The measurement of soil oxygen diffusion rate (ODR) with a platinum microelectrode was automated and used to characterize field aeration of a typical compact-layered sandy soil (Varina) under static and dynamic soil water regimes. The yield of millet, grown in the field under wet soil conditions, doubled when the ODR at the 10-cm depth increased from 0.09 to 0.15 .mu.g/cm2 min-1 and was related to the ODR, which fluctuated according to the amount of water infiltrating the soil as rainfall and irrigations. After the initial irrigation, the ODR in the A2 layer was below 0.2 .mu.g/cm2 min-1, the adopted critical ODR level for sustaining root growth for certain crops. Although the ODR in the B layer was greater than that in the A2, it was usually below the critical level. The ODR measurements were used to determine field soil matric potential (.chi.M) levels critical to aeration of plant roots, and to develop functional relationships between soil .chi.M and ODR for the A1, A2 and B horizons. Soil ODR profiles were calculated from measured soil .chi.M and compared with measured ODR profiles. Automating the ODR measurement procedure permitted frequent measurement of a sensitive and rapidly changing soil variable important to optimal plant growth.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Factors Affecting Measurements of Oxygen Diffusion Rate (ODR) with Bare Platinum Microelectrodes1Agronomy Journal, 1966
- Causes of Injury to Flooded Tobacco Plants.Plant Physiology, 1954