Spatially Resolved Root Water Uptake Determination Using a Precise Soil Water Sensor
Author(s) -
Dagmar van Dusschoten,
Johannes Kochs,
Christian Kuppe,
Viktor Sydoruk,
Valentin Couvreur,
Daniel Pflugfelder,
Johannes A. Postma
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.20.00488
Subject(s) - soil water , environmental science , water content , soil science , transpiration , temporal resolution , soil horizon , remote sensing , chemistry , photosynthesis , geology , optics , physics , biochemistry , geotechnical engineering
To answer long-standing questions about how plants use and regulate water, an affordable, noninvasive way to determine local root water uptake (RWU) is required. Here, we present a sensor, the soil water profiler (SWaP), which can determine local soil water content (θ) with a precision of 6.10 -5 cm 3 ⋅ cm -3 , an accuracy of 0.002 cm 3 ⋅ cm -3 , a temporal resolution of 24 min, and a one-dimensional spatial resolution of 1 cm. The sensor comprises two copper sheets, integrated into a sleeve and connected to a coil, which form a resonant circuit. A vector network analyzer, inductively coupled to the resonant circuit, measures the resonance frequency, against which θ was calibrated. The sensors were integrated into a positioning system, which measures θ along the depth of cylindrical tubes. When combined with modulating light (4-h period) and resultant modulating plant transpiration, the SWaP enables quantification of the component of RWU distribution that varies proportionally with total plant water uptake, and distinguishes it from soil water redistribution via soil pores and roots. Additionally, as a young, growing maize ( Zea mays ) plant progressively tapped its soil environment dry, we observed clear changes in plant-driven RWU and soil water redistribution profiles. Our SWaP setup can measure the RWU and redistribution of sandy-soil water content with unprecedented precision. The SWaP is therefore a promising device offering new insights into soil-plant hydrology, with applications for functional root phenotyping in nonsaline, temperature-controlled conditions, at low cost.
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