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

被引:7
|
作者
Wang, Tianshu [1 ,2 ]
Xu, Yanqi [1 ,2 ]
Zuo, Qiang [1 ,2 ]
Shi, Jianchu [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Wu, Xun [1 ,2 ]
Liu, Lining [1 ,2 ]
Sheng, Jiandong [3 ]
Jiang, Pingan [3 ]
Ben -Gal, Alon [4 ]
机构
[1] China Agr Univ, Coll Land Sci & Technol, Key Lab Plant Soil Interact, Minist Educ, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China
[2] Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Key Lab Arable Land Conservat North China, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China
[3] Xinjiang Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm, Urumqi 830052, Peoples R China
[4] Agr Res Org, Gilat Res Ctr, Soil Water & Environm Sci, IL-85280 Negev, Israel
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Combined water-salinity stress; Cross -adaptation effect; Cumulative effect; Hysteresis effect; Relative transpiration rate; Root zone soil conditions; NONUNIFORM TRANSIENT SALINITY; UPTAKE MODELS; GAS-EXCHANGE; SIMULATION; WHEAT; IRRIGATION; EXTRACTION; DROUGHT; PLANTS; CONDUCTIVITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.agwat.2023.108451
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
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 < 0.07, R2 > 0.91, MAE < 0.24). Under combined water-salinity stress conditions, neither an additive nor multiplicative approach was able to describe the interaction accurately. In addition to cumulative effect, by quantifying cross-adaptation effect with an exponential function, the multiplicative concave-convex functions significantly improved the estimation of relative transpiration rate for water- and salinity-stressed plants (RMSE < 0.08, R2 > 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.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Functions of rhizosheath on facilitating the uptake of water and nutrients under drought stress: A review
    Cheraghi, Meysam
    Mousavi, Seyed Majid
    Zarebanadkouki, Mohsen
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2023, 491 (1-2) : 239 - 263
  • [42] Plant and soil communities are associated with the response of soil water repellency to environmental stress
    Seaton, Fiona M.
    Jones, Davey L.
    Creer, Simon
    George, Paul B. L.
    Smart, Simon M.
    Lebron, Inma
    Barrett, Gaynor
    Emmett, Bridget A.
    Robinson, David A.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 687 : 929 - 938
  • [43] Modeling compensated root water and nutrient uptake
    Simunek, Jiri
    Hopmans, Jan W.
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2009, 220 (04) : 505 - 521
  • [44] Simulation of root water uptake I. Non-uniform transient salinity using different macroscopic reduction functions
    Homaee, M
    Dirksen, C
    Feddes, RA
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2002, 57 (02) : 89 - 109
  • [45] Compensatory hydraulic uptake of water by tomato due to variable root-zone salinity
    Tzohar, D.
    Moshelion, M.
    Ben-Gal, A.
    VADOSE ZONE JOURNAL, 2021, 20 (06)
  • [46] Relationship between root water uptake and soil respiration: A modeling perspective
    Teodosio, Bertrand
    Pauwels, Valentijn R. N.
    Loheide, Steven P., II
    Daly, Edoardo
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2017, 122 (08) : 1954 - 1968
  • [47] Investigating the root plasticity response of Centaurea jacea to soil water availability changes from isotopic analysis
    Kuehnhammer, Kathrin
    Kuebert, Angelika
    Brueggemann, Nicolas
    Diaz, Paulina Deseano
    van Dusschoten, Dagmar
    Javaux, Mathieu
    Merz, Steffen
    Vereecken, Harry
    Dubbert, Maren
    Rothfuss, Youri
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2020, 226 (01) : 98 - 110
  • [48] Grape Rootstock Response to Salinity, Water and Combined Salinity and Water Stresses
    Suarez, Donald L.
    Celis, Nydia
    Anderson, Ray G.
    Sandhu, Devinder
    AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2019, 9 (06):
  • [49] Root water uptake of biofuel crops revealed by coupled electrical resistivity and soil water content measurements
    Kuhl, Alexandria S.
    Kendall, Anthony D.
    van Dam, Remke L.
    Hamilton, Stephen K.
    Hyndman, David W.
    VADOSE ZONE JOURNAL, 2021, 20 (04)
  • [50] EXTENT, IMPACT, AND RESPONSE TO SOIL AND WATER SALINITY IN ARID AND SEMIARID REGIONS
    Sakadevan, Karuppan
    Nguyen, Minh-Long
    ADVANCES IN AGRONOMY, VOL 109, 2010, 109 : 55 - 74