Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake

Root–soil contact entails a trade-off between uptake opportunities and aeration requirements. A single root in the center of a cylinder of soil has been the standard geometry for which most root-level water and nutrient uptake models have been derived. However, this implies assumptions about complet...

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Main Authors: Peter de Willigen, Marius Heinen, Meine van Noordwijk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-02-01
Series:Vadose Zone Journal
Online Access:https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/170060
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spelling doaj-54af72814a8d4d709fb2a28a161b425b2020-11-25T02:57:37ZengWileyVadose Zone Journal1539-16632018-02-0117110.2136/vzj2017.03.0060Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water UptakePeter de WilligenMarius HeinenMeine van NoordwijkRoot–soil contact entails a trade-off between uptake opportunities and aeration requirements. A single root in the center of a cylinder of soil has been the standard geometry for which most root-level water and nutrient uptake models have been derived. However, this implies assumptions about complete root–soil contact and regularly spaced, parallel roots that do not conform to the situation in the field. In reality, the frequency distribution of transport distances will differ from what the cylinder model assumes, both by partial root–soil contact and irregular three-dimensional (3-D) distribution. We derived analytical equations describing the transport of water and nutrients to and uptake by roots in partial contact with soil for two extremes: (i) part of each root in contact or (ii) part of all roots in full contact and the rest without. Solutions range from negligible impacts to proportionality of uptake to the part of roots in contact with soil.https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/170060
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter de Willigen
Marius Heinen
Meine van Noordwijk
spellingShingle Peter de Willigen
Marius Heinen
Meine van Noordwijk
Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
Vadose Zone Journal
author_facet Peter de Willigen
Marius Heinen
Meine van Noordwijk
author_sort Peter de Willigen
title Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
title_short Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
title_full Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
title_fullStr Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
title_full_unstemmed Roots Partially in Contact with Soil: Analytical Solutions and Approximation in Models of Nutrient and Water Uptake
title_sort roots partially in contact with soil: analytical solutions and approximation in models of nutrient and water uptake
publisher Wiley
series Vadose Zone Journal
issn 1539-1663
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Root–soil contact entails a trade-off between uptake opportunities and aeration requirements. A single root in the center of a cylinder of soil has been the standard geometry for which most root-level water and nutrient uptake models have been derived. However, this implies assumptions about complete root–soil contact and regularly spaced, parallel roots that do not conform to the situation in the field. In reality, the frequency distribution of transport distances will differ from what the cylinder model assumes, both by partial root–soil contact and irregular three-dimensional (3-D) distribution. We derived analytical equations describing the transport of water and nutrients to and uptake by roots in partial contact with soil for two extremes: (i) part of each root in contact or (ii) part of all roots in full contact and the rest without. Solutions range from negligible impacts to proportionality of uptake to the part of roots in contact with soil.
url https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/170060
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AT mariusheinen rootspartiallyincontactwithsoilanalyticalsolutionsandapproximationinmodelsofnutrientandwateruptake
AT meinevannoordwijk rootspartiallyincontactwithsoilanalyticalsolutionsandapproximationinmodelsofnutrientandwateruptake
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