4.7 Article

The Dominant Control of Relief on Soil Water Content Distribution During Wet-Dry Transitions in Headwaters

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 57, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021WR029587

Keywords

soil volumetric water content; terrain attributes; soil attributes; wet-dry transitions

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [41730750, 41771025]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M651679]
  3. West Light Foundation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [29Y929621]

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The redistribution of hillslope soil water during and after rainstorms is influenced by soil properties and topography. 6-min data can capture short-lived flow processes, showing VWC-TWI correlations fluctuate frequently, and the correlation significantly increases during wet-dry transitions.
The redistribution of hillslope soil water during and after rainstorms is affected by soil properties and topography. Therefore, understanding how soil-terrain attributes affect the soil volumetric water content (VWC) distribution under various catchment storages is a prerequisite for accurate hydrological modeling. Herein, the relationships between soil-terrain attributes and soil VWC were examined in a steep (average slope = 60%), forested, zero-order catchment. Detailed topography, soil properties, and runoff, and high frequency (6-min) soil moisture data observed from July 2016 to November 2017 were employed along with resampled VWC data in three time-steps (daily, hourly, and 6-min intervals) for correlation analysis between soil-terrain attributes and measured VWC. The results showed that daily aggregated data overlooked the highly heterogeneous flow conditions under dry-wet transitions, leading to a constantly high correlation between VWC and the topographic wetness index (TWI). In comparison, the 6-min data captured short-lived flow processes, highlighting that, in reality, VWC-TWI correlations fluctuated frequently as a function of catchment storages and precipitation characteristics, with four wetting patterns identified. Under wet-dry transitions, the VWC-TWI correlations increased significantly (from 0.3 to 0.6) as the hillslope gradually drained of lateral subsurface water. Soil water behavior consists of diurnal oscillations superimposed on a declining trend, which demonstrates the existence of unsaturated flow and which contributed to the increase in the strength of the correlations. Finally, through correlation analysis of all drying (n = 4) and wetting (n = 45) periods, we found that soil-terrain attributes and VWC correlations can be used to identify the dominant soil water processes in various catchment storages.

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