Abstract
<p>Soil oxygen has been recognized as a potential limiting factor in plant production second only to water and nutrients. While it is widely accepted that soil gaseous oxygen levels below 10% V/V are detrimental to plant production, there are currently no accepted indices to quantify the effect of different agricultural practices on soil oxygen supply and availability. To address this challenge, a new approach is introduced, whereby indices describing the soil oxygen dynamics are determined using data from continuous in-situ soil oxygen measurements. To give the measurements a mechanistic interpretation, we developed a conceptual model describing the soil oxygen dynamics as a simplified mass balance between oxygen supply rate and oxygen consumption rate. The approach was applied to analyze field measurements of soil oxygen and water tension at 35 cm depth in avocado orchards irrigated with either Fresh Water (FW) or Treated Wastewater (TWW) in clay soil (~60% clay). The reliability of the method was shown, as soil respiration rates equivalent to 1-2 g O<sub>2</sub><sub></sub>m<sup>-2</sup> d<sup>-1</sup> were established, in line with previous reports for evergreen trees. The model defines the soil water tension at which oxygen supply to the measurement depth after irrigation surpasses the oxygen consumption rate as the critical soil water tension, and a value of ~50 mbar was established for the experiment site, again within the range described in the literature for soils with similar properties using other methodologies. Using the new approach, it was established that more hypoxic conditions occur in TWW irrigated plots as compared to FW irrigated plots due to a difference in the time required to reach the critical soil water tension – TWW irrigated plots took nearly 50% longer to reach a soil water tension of 50 mbar after each irrigation in the height of the irrigation season. This delay in TWW irrigated plots was directly related to the soil drying rate, which was lower in the TWW irrigated soils in both night and day periods, indicating both a hindering of drainage and of plant water uptake. In a second study site, the values describing the soil oxygen dynamics were found to relate to the soil stone content (particles>2mm), a known effector of soil aeration. By utilizing in-situ<sub></sub>measurements, the method aims to represent the intricate interrelations occurring in the field which may be missed using methods focusing on the individual factors affecting soil oxygen. The insights gained can provide the basis for designing management techniques to resolve unfavorable low oxygen levels in agriculture, as well as in natural environments where hypoxia affects soil carbon turnover, the evolution of greenhouse-gasses, and the fate of toxic elements in soils.</p>
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