Available Water Holding Capacity and Available Water Storage Capacity
Hello Professor Brown,
Thank you so much for answering my question.
Before I thought all these three terminologies had the same meaning. However, in the third edition textbook page 161 BOX 5.3, it said that the total amount of water available to a plant growing in a field soil can be estimated from the rooting depth of the plant and the amount of water held between field capacity and wilting percentage in each of the soil horizons explored by the roots. It use the function AWHC= (θmFC-θmWP)*Db*Dw*L. The unit they got is cm.
If Available water storage capacity, available water holding capacity and plant available water are the same, I was thinking why textbook has a different function to calculate AWHC with unit cm rather cm3/cm3? Did I miss something and interpret the textbook wrongly?
Thanks a lot!
Regards, Alice
Alice you are correct that the text is distinguishing the water available to the plant per rooting depth.
Fundamentally they are very similar except:
In the lecture notes we are distinguishing Available water storage capacity AWSC = FC - PWP [cm3 water / cm3 soil]. The assumption is made that water is applied evenly over space i.e. per cm2 (similar to the idea of rainfall; we report rainfall in mm or cm not cm3] Thus if we know the cm of water per cm of soil (vertically), we can multiply by the rooting depth (in cm) to get the cm of water available to the plant.
re: Box 5.3 (or Box 5.2 in the 2nd edition) - Calculation of the total amount of water available to a plant growing in the field
AWSC = FC - PWP
If moisture content is in g/g (mass basis) i.e. mg water per mg soil, you need to then convert this value into a volumetric water content (cm3 water / m3 soil). To do this you multiply by the ratio of the bulk density of the soil / density of water.
Once you have a volumetric water content (cm3/cm3), to determine the amount of water in the rooting zone, simply multiply by the rooting depth (20 cm in your example) = AWC (in the rooting zone)
I like being very clear with my units, i.e. cm water / rooting zone