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ARS Home » Plains Area » Bushland, Texas » Conservation and Production Research Laboratory » Soil and Water Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #410327

Research Project: Dryland and Irrigated Crop Management Under Limited Water Availability and Drought

Location: Soil and Water Management Research

Title: Field evaluation of conventional and downhole TDR soil water sensors for irrigation scheduling in a clay loam soil

Author
item Marek, Gary
item Evett, Steven - Steve
item MAREK, THOMAS - TEXAS A&M AGRILIFE
item PORTER, DANA - TEXAS A&M AGRILIFE
item Schwartz, Robert

Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 11/10/2023
Publication Date: 12/6/2023
Citation: Marek, G.W., Evett, S.R., Marek, T.H., Porter, D.O., Schwartz, R.C. 2023. Field evaluation of conventional and downhole TDR soil water sensors for irrigation scheduling in a clay loam soil [abstract]. 2023 Texas Plant Protection Conference, December 5-6, 2023, Bryan, Texas.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: A field study was performed to evaluate the efficacy of two commercially available time domain reflectometry (TDR) soil water sensors for irrigation scheduling in a clay loam soil near Bushland, Texas. SoilVUE10 (Campbell Scientific Inc., Logan, Utah) and TDR-315 (Acclima Inc., Meridian, Idaho) sensors were installed within 30 cm of neutron moisture meter (NMM) access tubes in a research field planted to corn (Zea mays L) in 2020 and irrigated by a center pivot sprinkler system. Irrigation treatments included 50, 75, and 100 percent of evapotranspiration (ET) replacement with two access tubes installed in each plot, totaling six sensor evaluation sites. Semiweekly measurements with a field-calibrated NMM were used to monitor soil water status and schedule irrigation throughout the growing season. Soil profile water content values integrated over the surface to 1.1-m depth range were derived from SoilVUE10 and vertically distributed arrays of Acclima TDR-315 sensors installed at equivalent depths and were compared with those from NMM data. Average profile soil water contents from the TDR-315 sensors trended well with those from the NMM having mean bias difference (MBD) values of -9.8, -3.1, and 8.4 mm for the 50, 75, and 100 percent treatments, respectively. In contrast, soil profile water content values from the SoilVUE10 sensors grossly underestimated those from the NMM for all irrigation treatments with MBD values of -54.4, -70.5, and -89.8 mm for the 50, 75, and 100 percent treatments, respectively. Comparisons of volumetric water content (VWC) at each of the nine depths common to both electromagnetic sensor types revealed that values from the SoilVUE10 sensors were consistently less than TDR-315 values for all irrigation treatments. Underestimation at the near surface (5 and 10 cm depths) was attributed to loss of soil to electrode contact possibly associated with clay shrinkage during periodic drying following irrigation. Although soil to electrode contact can be problematic at greater depths, the explanation for chronic underestimation of VWC was less obvious except to note that underestimation occurred immediately after installation, which indicated poor electrode-soil contact after installation despite use of manufacturer guidelines and tools. Other possible reasons include challenges for accurate estimation of soil permittivity for a measured permittivity that includes the plastic sensor body. Results from this study suggest vertically distributed arrays of TDR-315 sensors can provide profile water content values adequate for monitoring soil water status for irrigation scheduling in a clay loam soil. The chronic underestimation observed for the SoilVUE10 sensors does not support their use for water resources research and irrigation management and could lead to over irrigation. Additionally, the relatively short 1 m length is less than the rooting depth of many regional crops and thus not capable of determining percolation below the root zone.