Soil salinity dynamics in arid oases during irrigated and non‐irrigated seasons

Author:

Zhu Chuanmei123ORCID,Ding Jianli123,Zhang Zipeng123ORCID,Wang Jinjie123,Chen Xiangyue4,Han Lijing123,Shi Haobo25,Wang Jingzhe67

Affiliation:

1. College of Geography and Remote Sensing Sciences Xinjiang University Urumqi PR China

2. Xinjiang Key Laboratory of Oasis Ecology Xinjiang University Urumqi PR China

3. College of Geography and Remote Sensing Sciences Key Laboratory of Smart City and Environment Modelling of Higher Education Institute Urumqi PR China

4. College of Atmospheric Sciences Lanzhou University Lanzhou PR China

5. College of Ecology and Environment Xinjiang University Urumqi PR China

6. School of Artificial Intelligence Shenzhen Polytechnic Shenzhen PR China

7. State Key Laboratory of Resources and Environmental Information System Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing PR China

Abstract

AbstractPreventing soil salinization is key to the healthy development of agroecosystems in arid regions. Notably, long‐term anthropogenic irrigation accelerates secondary salinity accumulation in arid areas; however, the regional‐scale spatial patterns of soil salinity pre‐ and post‐irrigation season remain unclear. Accordingly, field observations over two periods (n = 182 samples), along with environmental covariates and the randomForest algorithm, were used to estimate the horizontal and vertical spatial distributions (12 soil depths) of soil salinity in the Weiku Oasis (0–60 cm) at a 30 m spatial resolution. The results showed that the prediction accuracy was greater for the non‐irrigated season than for the irrigated season. Moreover, soil salinity was low in the interior of the oasis, high in the desert oasis interlacing zone, and significantly decreased with increasing soil depth. Variable contributions indicated that the effects of SoilGrids variables on soil salinity increased with greater soil depth. During the irrigation season, an inflection point for salt aggregation was observed at ~55 cm for farmlands, grasslands, and shrubs, with the greatest variation seen in farmlands. The findings here provide insights into the improvement of irrigation techniques in arid zone agroecosystems.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Fuzhou University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science,General Environmental Science,Development,Environmental Chemistry

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