Abstract

The effects of rainfall-induced soil seals on drying processes and on infiltration following drying intervals are simulated for two different soils, a loam and a sandy loam. The simulated drying processes include water content redistribution without evaporation and under a constant evaporation rate of 5 mm day−1. During evaporation, the water content at the seal surface decreases rapidly. A high water content gradient develops within the seal, which increases along the drying interval. It indicates that, at least during the first hours of drying, the seal layer fulfilled all the evaporation demand and therefore dries faster that an unsealed soil where the evaporation is supplied by a much deeper zone of the soil profile. This phenomenon is more accentuated in the loam than in the sandy loam soil. Considering the subsequent infiltration curves during rainfall following different drying intervals, the ponding time and the post-ponding infiltration rates increase when the antecedent drying period is longer, but no significant effect on the final infiltration is found following drying intervals of few days. Also, the water content at the sealed soil surface before rainfall seems to play a major role on infiltration. Very close infiltration curves were obtained after different drying intervals that ended with similar surface water content.

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