A review of researches on soil cracks and their impacts on preferential flow
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    Abstract:

    Soil tends to shrink and form cracks when it gets dried up. Soil cracks are formed under the joint effect of a variety of factors, like soil properties and environment conditions, and very complicate and hard to describe precisely in morphological structure. As they may act as pathways for preferential flow, their presence enhances the risks of water and nutrient loss and pollution of groundwater. Soil properties, such as soil clay content, soil mineral composition, soil organic carbon content and bulk density, etc. are the main factors affecting soil cracking, while wetting and drying alternation, tillage and plant growth are its external affecting factors. So far, the characterizing indices and determination methods available for soil cracks focus mainly on their two-dimensional structural features, and little has been reported about characterizing indices and determination methods for three-dimensional structure of cracks. The methods for measuring preferential flow caused by soil cracks include dye tracer, disc permeameter, breakthrough curve, profile soil water potential measurement and so on. Cracks vary in feature with soil water content, so the effect of soil cracks on preferential flow is complicate, and closely related to soil properties, soil water content and depth of the cracks. The dynamic variation of cracks makes it more difficult to simulate preferential flow caused by soil cracks. It is, therefore, suggested that more efforts should be dedicated in future to conducting in-depth complete researches on crack-forming mechanism; establishing three-dimensional index systems and determination methods for soil cracks and improving the systems and methods; promoting researches on quantification and mathematic simulation of crack-induced preferential flow; and enhancing in situ field study of cracks and preferential flow.

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Zhang Zhongbin, Peng Xinhua. A review of researches on soil cracks and their impacts on preferential flow[J]. Acta Pedologica Sinica,2015,52(3):477-488.

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History
  • Received:September 03,2014
  • Revised:January 15,2015
  • Adopted:January 19,2015
  • Online: March 02,2015
  • Published: