4.2 Article

A generally applicable pedotransfer function that estimates field capacity and permanent wilting point from soil texture and bulk density

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 88, Issue 5, Pages 761-774

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.4141/CJSS07120

Keywords

Pedotransfer functions; soil moisture; soil texture; bulk density; organic matter; grouping

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Pollacco, J. A. P. 2008. A generally applicable pedotransfer function that estimates field capacity and permanent wilting point from soil texture and bulk density. Can. J. Soil Sci. 88: 761-774. Hydrological models require the determination of fitting parameters that are tedious and time consuming to acquire. A rapid alternative method of estimating the fitting parameters is to use pedotransfer functions. This paper proposes a reliable method to estimate soil moisture at -33 and -1500 kPa from soil texture and bulk density. This method reduces the saturated moisture content by multiplying it with two nonlinear functions depending on sand and clay contents. The novel pedotransfer function has no restrictions on the range of 3 the texture predictors and gives reasonable predictions for soils with bulk density that varies from 0.25 to 2.16 g cm(-3). These pedotransfer functions require only five parameters for each pressure head. It is generally accepted that the introduction of organic matter as a predictor improves the Outcomes; however it was found by using a porosity based pedotransfer model, using organic matter as a predictor only modestly improves the accuracy. The model was developed employing 18 559 samples from the IGBP-DIS soil data set for pedotransfer function development (Data and Information System of the International Geosphere Biosphere Programme) database that embodies all major soils across the United States of America. The function is reliable and performs well for a wide range of soils occurring in very dry to very wet climates. Climatical grouping of the IGBP-DIS soils was proposed (aquic, tropical, cryic, aridic), but the results show that only tropical soils require specific grouping. Among many other different non-climatical soil groups tested, only humic and vitric soils were found to require specific grouping. The reliability of the pedotransfer function was further demonstrated with an independent database from Northern Italy having heterogeneous soils, and was found to be comparable or better than the accuracy of other pedotransfer functions found in the literature.

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