Abstract

Soil moisture has a great influence on vegetation growth and survival in arid and semiarid regions. Information about deep soil moisture dynamics is vital for restoring vegetation and improving land management on the water-limited Loess Plateau. The spatiotemporal dynamics and temporal stability of deep soil moisture (at a soil depth of 600 cm) were observed in situ under Caragana korshinskii shrubs that had various stand ages (named CK-10yr, CK-20yr and CK-35yr) in the Loess hilly region of China. The results showed that under C. korshinskii, soil moisture generally decreased as the stand age rose. Meanwhile, its moisture was consistent with precipitation variation, and an obvious time lag in soil moisture was found compared to that in precipitation during the entire growing season. Along the soil profile, a transition belt linking the shallow with deep soil moisture occurred at a 200 cm soil depth in different slope positions and aspects. At the slope scale, both the slope aspect and slope position significantly affected soil moisture variation in the areas with planted C. korshinskii shrubs, experiencing a decreasing trend from semi-shady slopes to sunny ones and from lower positions to upper ones. However, the variance in soil moisture between different positions and slope aspects was small. For the slope aspect, except for CK-20yr, the different-aged C. korshinskii shrubs had higher soil moisture content on sunny slopes than on semi-shady slopes at the upper 0–200 cm soil depth, while the opposite was true at the 200–600 cm soil depths. For slope positions, the soil moisture variation was small between the 0 and 200 cm soil depths and larger between the 200 and 600 cm soil depths. Within the whole profiles, the representative depth under the C. korshinskii shrubs for the soil moisture content was mainly concentrated between the 400–500 cm soil depths, on average, showing a gradual deepening trend with increasing restoration age. In summary, the findings indicate that natural recovery with low-water consumption grasslands and manual management measures, such as thinning and mowing, should be strengthened to minimize the high soil moisture consumption rates that occur in a healthy soil moisture environment and maintain sustainable vegetation restoration.

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