Abstract

Abstract. Knowledge about the scaling properties of soil water storage is crucial in transferring locally measured fluctuations to larger scales and vice-versa. Studies based on remotely sensed data have shown that the variability in surface soil water has clear scaling properties (i.e., statistically self similar) over a wider range of spatial scales. However, the scaling property of soil water storage to a certain depth at a field scale is not well understood. The major challenges in scaling analysis for soil water are the presence of localized trends and nonstationarities in the spatial series. The objective of this study was to characterize scaling properties of soil water storage variability through multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis (MFDFA). A field experiment was conducted in a sub-humid climate at Alvena, Saskatchewan, Canada. A north-south transect of 624-m long was established on a rolling landscape. Soil water storage was monitored weekly between 2002 and 2005 at 104 locations along the transect. The spatial scaling property of the surface 0 to 40 cm depth was characterized using the MFDFA technique for six of the soil water content series (all gravimetrically determined) representing soil water storage after snowmelt, rainfall, and evapotranspiration. For the studied transect, scaling properties of soil water storage are different between drier periods and wet periods. It also appears that local controls such as site topography and texture (that dominantly control the pattern during wet states) results in multiscaling property. The nonlocal controls such as evapotranspiration results in the reduction of the degree of multiscaling and improvement in the simple scaling. Therefore, the scaling property of soil water storage is a function of both soil moisture status and the spatial extent considered.

Highlights

  • The spatial and temporal pattern of soil water storage is an important input variable in assessing land-atmosphere interactions, infiltration, recharge, and performance of engineered covers

  • The total precipitation received in the calendar years of 2002 and 2004 was generally higher than the long term average precipitation of the area and these years are regarded as wet years

  • We studied the scaling properties of the fluctuations in soil water storage in a sub humid climate of Saskatchewan using data series selected from a long term monitoring experiment

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Summary

Introduction

The spatial and temporal pattern of soil water storage is an important input variable in assessing land-atmosphere interactions, infiltration, recharge, and performance of engineered covers. The variability in soil water storage is shown to be strongly related to topographic, geologic, soil, and vegetation parameters (Braud et al, 1995; Moore et al, 1988). These physical factors and environmental processes (rainfall, evapotranspiration, runoff, and snow melt) do not operate independently, but as an ensemble of processes with a complex and nested effects. Several studies have reported a scale dependent pattern and variability of soil water storage (Kachanoski and de Jong, 1988; Gomez-Plaza et al, 2000; Kim and Barros, 2002; Biswas and Si, 2011a)

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