Agricultural Water Management (Sep 2023)

Evaluating and improving soil water and salinity stress response functions for root water uptake

  • Tianshu Wang,
  • Yanqi Xu,
  • Qiang Zuo,
  • Jianchu Shi,
  • Xun Wu,
  • Lining Liu,
  • Jiandong Sheng,
  • Pingan Jiang,
  • Alon Ben-Gal

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 287
p. 108451

Abstract

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Many functions have been proposed to describe the response of root water uptake to water and/or salinity stresses. In practice, choosing a reliable stress response function is challenging, particularly when water and salinity stresses occur simultaneously. To explore and quantify the effects of soil water and salinity conditions, separately and combined, on root water uptake, two experiments culturing winter wheat in artificial climate chambers were conducted with various water and salinity levels. As the key index, plant water status was evaluated by: a) considering the relative position of water and salinity to roots; b) rectifying estimation of potential transpiration for stressed plants; c) excluding data during recovery periods dominated by the hysteresis process of historical stress; and d) quantifying the interaction between water and salinity stresses. Including only one fitting parameter and two water or salinity thresholds with clear physical meaning and available recommendations, concave-convex function could quantify the effects of water or salinity stress more accurately than the others, leading to more reliable estimation of relative transpiration rate (RMSE 0.91, MAE 0.72, MAE < 0.28). Nevertheless, mechanisms underlying the interaction between water and salinity stresses are still unclear and should be further investigated. To avoid the hysteresis effect of historical stress, excluding data during recovery periods was helpful, but its quantitative characterization is also necessary for accurate simulation of root water uptake and should be further studied.

Keywords