Geophysical imaging of root-zone, trunk, and moisture heterogeneity

TitleGeophysical imaging of root-zone, trunk, and moisture heterogeneity
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsHagrey, S. Attia Al
JournalJournal of Experimental Botany
Volume58
Issue4
Pagination839 - 854
Date Published2007///
KeywordsElectric Impedance, Electrical resistivity techniques, Electrodes, Geological Phenomena, Geology, Plant Roots, Plant Roots: metabolism, Populus, Populus: physiology, Portugal, Quercus, Quercus: anatomy & histology, Quercus: metabolism, Radar, radar imaging, ring electrode array, root-zone, sap flow, seismic tomography, trunk ring structure, vadose zone, water, water content, water flow, Water: analysis, Water: metabolism
Abstract

The most significant biotic and abiotic stress agents of water extremity, salinity, and infection lead to wood decay and modifications of moisture and ion content, and density. This strongly influences the (di-)electrical and mechanical properties and justifies the application of geophysical imaging techniques. These are less invasive and have high resolution in contrast to classical methods of destructive, single-point measurements for inspecting stresses in trees and soils. This review presents some in situ and in vivo applications of electric, radar, and seismic methods for studying water status and movement in soils, roots, and tree trunks. The electrical properties of a root-zone are a consequence of their moisture content. Electrical imaging discriminates resistive, woody roots from conductive, soft roots. Both types are recognized by low radar velocities and high attenuation. Single roots can generate diffraction hyperbolas in radargrams. Pedophysical relationships of water content to electrical resistivity and radar velocity are established by diverse infiltration experiments in the field, laboratory, and in the full-scale ‘GeoModel’ at Kiel University. Subsurface moisture distributions are derived from geophysical attribute models. The ring electrode technique around trunks images the growth ring structure of concentric resistivity, which is inversely proportional to the fluid content. Healthy trees show a central high resistivity within the dry heartwood that strongly decreases towards the peripheral wet sapwood. Observed structural deviations are caused by infection, decay, shooting, or predominant light and/or wind directions. Seismic trunk tomography also differentiates between decayed and healthy woods.

URLhttp://jxb.oxfordjournals.org/content/58/4/839.abstracthttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17229759