Abstract

Soil salt crusts have been shown to have a strong influence on evaporation and water movement in soils, and this has attracted considerable attention. However, there is little information available on these processes during flooding. The objective of this study was to investigate the evaporation rate, variation in the groundwater table, and soil water content of salt-crusted soil flooded by five floodwater depths: 2 mm (Treatment A), 6 mm (Treatment B), 10 mm (Treatment C) 14 mm (Treatment D), and 18 mm (Treatment E). The experiments were carried out using repacked homogeneous silt loam soil columns in the laboratory. The experimental results showed that salt crust formation led to a low evaporation rate. The salt crust tended to form a dome, and some breakage occurred when the salt crust was dry. The broken crust increased the evaporation rate, indicating that the evaporation occurred below the crust. The soil moisture did not significantly change in the soil profile from 20 to 70 cm during the experimental period, which indicated that the existence of the evaporation front located in a layer very close to the surface. The evaporation rate rapidly increased when floodwater was added to the soils and returned to its previous low value after the salt crust reformed. However, before the salt crust reformed, there was a total water loss of 2.1, 4.3, 6.6, 10.1, and 13.8 mm for treatments A, B, C, D, and E, respectively, indicating that only a portion of the floodwater evaporated; another portion of the floodwater was discharged into the groundwater, causing the groundwater table to rise, although only by a small amount (6 mm). Therefore, the groundwater recharge caused by flooding should be considered. Otherwise, groundwater consumption may be overestimated.

Highlights

  • Salinity problems are caused by the presence of saline groundwater at shallow depths as a result of strong evaporation, and this scenario can lead to land degradation [1,2], especially in arid and semiarid regions [3]

  • Showed that the groundwater table was lifted before the salt crust reformed and the evaporation rate returned to a low value

  • The effects of different flood water depths (2, 6, 10, 14, and 18 mm) on the evaporation rate, soil water content, and groundwater table level were investigated in the lab using a silt loam soil column from a groundwater table with a depth of 90 cm

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Summary

Introduction

Salinity problems are caused by the presence of saline groundwater at shallow depths as a result of strong evaporation, and this scenario can lead to land degradation [1,2], especially in arid and semiarid regions [3]. Salt efflorescence, which is the formation of the salt crust on soils, is a well-known phenomenon in arid and semiarid regions where the annual evapotranspiration significantly exceeds the precipitation [6]. Salt crust formation influences dust emission [7,8], evaporation [3,9,10,11,12], water infiltration [13], and plant growth [14,15]; these effects have caused great concern in arid regions.

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