Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers

Information about evaporation and transpiration fluxes is vital for water budgets, modeling of water flows and climate, as well as for assessing the hydrological impact of land management practices. Under natural conditions, these fluxes are difficult to measure accurately, which results in large me...

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Main Authors: Stefanie Pflug, Bernard R. Voortman, Jan-Philip M. Witte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-01-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/2/355
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spelling doaj-0d82b1e65c2b43c4b026bbcabc3118f92020-11-25T02:20:44ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412020-01-0112235510.3390/w12020355w12020355Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in ContainersStefanie Pflug0Bernard R. Voortman1Jan-Philip M. Witte2KWR Water Research Institute, 3433 PE Nieuwegein, The NetherlandsMoisture Matters, 3533 ED Utrecht, The NetherlandsFlip Witte Ecohydrologie, 6862 DC Oosterbeek, The NetherlandsInformation about evaporation and transpiration fluxes is vital for water budgets, modeling of water flows and climate, as well as for assessing the hydrological impact of land management practices. Under natural conditions, these fluxes are difficult to measure accurately, which results in large measurement inaccuracies. These inaccuracies can be reduced in controlled experiments. We present a device that is especially useful for transpiration studies conducted in large and/or heavy containers where weighing becomes too cumbersome or expensive. With our device we set a water table and control soil moisture of potted small trees by periodically replenishing soil water consumed by the tree, thereby measuring the inflow volume, which represent whole-tree transpiration. The device is made of inexpensive, easily available and durable materials and can be used for in- and outdoor experiments. Data acquisition is fast and easy. The mean measurement error of the device is 4.5% (±3.2% SD) for refill (i.e., transpiration) volumes of 1.5 L or larger. For a transpiring surface of 3 m², this amount is equal to an accuracy of 0.02 mm. Validation on field data showed that transpiration measured by the device is comparable to transpiration measured by gravimetric changes.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/2/355whole-plant transpirationcontrolled experimentgravimetrytrees
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefanie Pflug
Bernard R. Voortman
Jan-Philip M. Witte
spellingShingle Stefanie Pflug
Bernard R. Voortman
Jan-Philip M. Witte
Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
Water
whole-plant transpiration
controlled experiment
gravimetry
trees
author_facet Stefanie Pflug
Bernard R. Voortman
Jan-Philip M. Witte
author_sort Stefanie Pflug
title Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
title_short Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
title_full Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
title_fullStr Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
title_full_unstemmed Technical Note: A Device to Directly Measure Transpiration from Vegetation Grown in Containers
title_sort technical note: a device to directly measure transpiration from vegetation grown in containers
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Information about evaporation and transpiration fluxes is vital for water budgets, modeling of water flows and climate, as well as for assessing the hydrological impact of land management practices. Under natural conditions, these fluxes are difficult to measure accurately, which results in large measurement inaccuracies. These inaccuracies can be reduced in controlled experiments. We present a device that is especially useful for transpiration studies conducted in large and/or heavy containers where weighing becomes too cumbersome or expensive. With our device we set a water table and control soil moisture of potted small trees by periodically replenishing soil water consumed by the tree, thereby measuring the inflow volume, which represent whole-tree transpiration. The device is made of inexpensive, easily available and durable materials and can be used for in- and outdoor experiments. Data acquisition is fast and easy. The mean measurement error of the device is 4.5% (±3.2% SD) for refill (i.e., transpiration) volumes of 1.5 L or larger. For a transpiring surface of 3 m², this amount is equal to an accuracy of 0.02 mm. Validation on field data showed that transpiration measured by the device is comparable to transpiration measured by gravimetric changes.
topic whole-plant transpiration
controlled experiment
gravimetry
trees
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/2/355
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