Time-lapse monitoring of root water uptake using electrical resistivity tomography and mise-à-la-masse: A vineyard infiltration experiment

Benjamin Mary, Luca Peruzzo, Jacopo Boaga, Nicola Cenni, Myriam Schmutz, Yuxin Wu, Susan S Hubbard, Giorgio Cassiani

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper presents a time-lapse application of electrical methods (electrical resistivity tomography, ERT; and mise-à-la-masse, MALM) for monitoring plant roots and their activity (root water uptake) during a controlled infiltration experiment. The use of non-invasive geophysical monitoring is of increasing interest as these techniques provide time-lapse imaging of processes that otherwise can only be measured at few specific spatial locations. The experiment here described was conducted in a vineyard in Bordeaux (France) and was focused on the behaviour of two neighbouring grapevines. The joint application of ERT and MALM has several advantages. While ERT in time-lapse mode is sensitive to changes in soil electrical resistivity and thus to the factors controlling it (mainly soil water content, in this context), MALM uses DC current injected into a tree stem to image where the plant root system is in effective electrical contact with the soil at locations that are likely to be the same where root water uptake (RWU) takes place. Thus, ERT and MALM provide complementary information about the root structure and activity. The experiment shows that the region of likely electrical current sources produced by MALM does not change significantly during the infiltration time in spite of the strong changes of electrical resistivity caused by changes in soil water content. Ultimately, the interpretation of the current source distribution strengthened the hypothesis of using current as a proxy for root detection. This fact, together with the evidence that current injection in the soil and in the stem produces totally different voltage patterns, corroborates the idea that this application of MALM highlights the active root density in the soil. When considering the electrical resistivity changes (as measured by ERT) inside the stationary volume of active roots delineated by MALM, the overall tendency is towards a resistivity increase during irrigation time, which can be linked to a decrease in soil water content caused by root water uptake. On the contrary, when considering the soil volume outside the MALM-derived root water uptake region, the electrical resistivity tends to decrease as an effect of soil water content increase caused by the infiltration. The use of a simplified infiltration model confirms at least qualitatively this behaviour. The monitoring results are particularly promising, and the method can be applied to a variety of scales including the laboratory scale where direct evidence of root structure and root water uptake can help corroborate the approach. Once fully validated, the joint use of MALM and ERT can be used as a valuable tool to study the activity of roots under a wide variety of field conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)95-114
Number of pages20
JournalSOIL
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 6 2020

Funding

Financial support. This research has been supported by the ER-ANETMED (grant no. FP7), the Hydro-geophysical monitoring and modelling for the Earth’s Critical Zone (grant no. CPDA147114), and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under a Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement (grant no. 842922). Acknowledgements. The authors wish to acknowledge support from the ERANETMED (grant no. FP7) project WASA (“Water Saving in Agriculture: Technological developments for the sustainable management of limited water resources in the Mediterranean area”). Benjamin Mary gratefully acknowledge the University of Padua for the funding of the “Assegno di ricerca”. In addition, the information, data and work presented herein was funded in part by the Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) project under work authorization no. 16/CJ000/04/08 and an Office of Science Biological and Environmental Research Watershed Function SFA project under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof. Luca Peruzzo and Myr-iam Schmutz gratefully acknowledge the financial support from IDEX (Initiative D’EXellence, France).

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