Abstract

Abstract. The investigation of plant roots is inherently difficult and often neglected. Being out of sight, roots are often out of mind. Nevertheless, roots play a key role in the exchange of mass and energy between soil and the atmosphere, in addition to the many practical applications in agriculture. In this paper, we propose a method for roots imaging based on the joint use of two electrical noninvasive methods: electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and mise-à-la-masse (MALM). The approach is based on the key assumption that the plant root system acts as an electrically conductive body, so that injecting electrical current into the plant stem will ultimately result in the injection of current into the subsoil through the root system, and particularly through the root terminations via hair roots. Evidence from field data, showing that voltage distribution is very different whether current is injected into the tree stem or in the ground, strongly supports this hypothesis. The proposed procedure involves a stepwise inversion of both ERT and MALM data that ultimately leads to the identification of electrical resistivity (ER) distribution and of the current injection root distribution in the three-dimensional soil space. This, in turn, is a proxy to the active (hair) root density in the ground. We tested the proposed procedure on synthetic data and, more importantly, on field data collected in a vineyard, where the estimated depth of the root zone proved to be in agreement with literature on similar crops. The proposed noninvasive approach is a step forward towards a better quantification of root structure and functioning.

Highlights

  • Methods2.1 Site descriptionThe field study was carried out in a vinery of the Château La Louvière appellation contrôlée, located in Pessac-Léognan (Fig. 1a) near Bordeaux (Gironde, France)

  • 1.1 Problem statementSoil root systems play a pivotal role in the many soil hydrological functions

  • In this paper we present evidence showing how the joint use of MALM and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) in a high-resolution, 3-D configuration around a tree can provide very detailed information about the plant root system

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Summary

Methods

2.1 Site descriptionThe field study was carried out in a vinery of the Château La Louvière appellation contrôlée, located in Pessac-Léognan (Fig. 1a) near Bordeaux (Gironde, France). According to the meteorological station near the experimental plot (200 m), the study period was wet after rainfall, with an air temperature of 11 ◦C. Despite heterogeneities of soil types composing the vineyards (André et al, 2012), the plot is located in a similar soil system (Baize and Girard, 1995). Rooting depth has been qualitatively observed on a bare soil at the emplacement of uprooted vine plants and can only be seen as ancillary information. In this horizon, all root sizes with a rather horizontal and oblique orientation were observed. Considering the selected plant and the slight slope of the vineyard, it might be reasonable to foresee a top layer rooting with an asymmetric development (gravitropism)

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