/AnMtgsAbsts2009.56965 A Simple Mesopore and Matrix Infiltration Model Based On Soil Structure.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Second Floor

Brian Lepore, Dept. of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, Ball State Univ., Muncie, IN, Cristine Morgan, Dept. of Soil & Crop Sciences, Texas A&M Univ., AgriLife Res., College Station, TX, John Norman, 1525 Observatory Drive, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI and Christine Molling, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI
Abstract:
We present the two-domain, Mesopore and Matrix (M&M), water-infiltration module based on soil structure for the Precision Agricultural-Landscape Modeling System (PALMS), by combining laminar flow of water through inter-aggregate slits with water movement from slits into aggregates using Darcy’s law. The M&M model is based on new assumptions using soil aggregate geometry that allow the model to be more easily parameterized for landscapes with varyingvarying soil properties.  The vertical and horizontal arrangement of aggregates and the slit width (2Bped(θ)) are based on cubic geometry, where the width of the cubes represents the width (wped(θ,z)) of soil structural units, which depends on soil water content (θ) and depth (z). The M&M module can be parameterized so that mesopore infiltration resembles that of the Richards equation as a starting point for the preferential flow parameterization. Using field measurements of ped size and in-situ mesopore volume to calculate Bped(θ) and wped(θ,z), the parameters from the Richards equation starting point can be modified to capture mesopore effects. PALMS was run using this approach with and without M&M for the 1996 frost-free growing season (March 1 to Nov. 1).  While both models slightly under-predicted 1.4 m depth drainage compared with independently measured field data from the same period, PALMS with the M&M module increased estimated drainage by 32% in response to the largest 1996 storm event (~100 mm in 2 days) and 11% seasonally (627 mm cumulative precipitation) over the original PALMS model using the Green and Ampt approach. For the 2008 growing season, a period of unusually high rainfall rates (820 mm annual precipitation), PALMS with M&M simulated a 57% increase in drainage response to the season’s largest storm (~ 200 mm in 2 days) and a 20% increase in seasonal drainage compared toto PALMS with the Green and Ampt equations. For both 1996 and 2008 seasons, the drainage response to large storms predicted by PALMS with M&M occurred much more rapidly (hours as opposed to days) than PALMS with the Green and Ampt approach.