4.6 Article

Hydrological consequences of land-cover change: Quantifying the influence of plants on soil moisture with time-lapse electrical resistivity

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GEOPHYSICS
卷 75, 期 4, 页码 WA43-WA50

出版社

SOC EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICISTS
DOI: 10.1190/1.3464760

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资金

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR-0911642]
  2. Michigan State University Center for Water Sciences
  3. Directorate For Geosciences
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences [0911642] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Electrical resistivity of soils and sediments is strongly influenced by the presence of interstitial water. Taking advantage of this dependency, electrical-resistivity imaging (ERI) can be effectively utilized to estimate subsurface soil-moisture distributions. The ability to obtain spatially extensive data combined with time-lapse measurements provides further opportunities to understand links between land use and climate processes. In natural settings, spatial and temporal changes in temperature and porewater salinity influence the relationship between soil moisture and electrical resistivity. Apart from environmental factors, technical, theoretical, and methodological ambiguities may also interfere with accurate estimation of soil moisture from ERI data. We have examined several of these complicating factors using data from a two-year study at a forest-grassland ecotone, a boundary between neighboring but different plant communities. At this site, temperature variability accounts for approximately 20%-45% of resistivity changes from cold winter to warm summer months. Temporal changes in groundwater conductivity (mean = 650 mu S/cm; sigma = 57.7) and a roughly 100-mu S/cm spatial difference between the forest and grassland had only a minor influence on the moisture estimates. Significant seasonal fluctuations in temperature and precipitation had negligible influence on the basic measurement errors in data sets. Extracting accurate temporal changes from ERE can be hindered by nonuniqueness of the inversion process and uncertainties related to time-lapse inversion schemes. The accuracy of soil moisture obtained from ERI depends on all of these factors, in addition to empirical parameters that define the petrophysical soil-moisture/resistivity relationship. Many of the complicating factors and modifying variables to accurately quantify soil moisture changes with ERI can be accounted for using field and theoretical principles.

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