Responses of Effective Soil Water Content to Accumulative Effect of Vegetation Growth in Songshan Nature Reserve

Hailong Wu, Jinglan Liu1, Zhenming Zhang


Research Articles | Published:

Print ISSN : 0970-4078.
Online ISSN : 2229-4473.
Website:www.vegetosindia.org
Pub Email: contact@vegetosindia.org
Doi: 10.5958/j.2229-4473.26.1.040
First Page: 278
Last Page: 282
Views: 1310


Keywords: soil organic matter, effective soil water content, drought resistant.


Abstract


Effective soil water is an indicator of soil moisture and reflects the drought resistance capacity of soil. Four types of forest soils were chosen to analyze the correlation between organic matters and effective soil water. The results indicated that the correlation between organic matter and effective soil water were not positively related; where organic contents were high and the soil water content was not always high. Soil moisture under broad-leaf species was greater than mixed coniferous stands when organic matter was above 50 g.kg−1. Increasing rate of soil moisture decreases with an increase in soil organic matter which indicates a point of equilibrium between organic matter content and effective water content. Determination of soil organic matter is a new approach to predict drought resistance capacity for forestry water resource management.


*Get Access

(*Only SPR Members can get full access. Click Here to Apply and get access)

Advertisement

References



Acknowledgements



Author Information


Hailong Wu Jinglan Liu1 Zhenming Zhang
College of Soil and Water Conservation, Beijing Forestry University, P.O. Box 89, Beijing, 100083, China

1College of Nature Conservation, Beijing Forestry University, P.O. Box 159, Beijing, 100083, China

*Corresponding author Email: petera@bjfu.edu.cn

Online published on 9 July, 2013.