Spatial and temporal variability of soil horizons and long-term solute transport under semi-arid conditions

Author:

Woods S. A.1,Dyck M. F.2,Kachanoski R. G.3

Affiliation:

1. Alberta Agriculture and Rural Development, Irrigation and Farm Water Division, 100, 5401, 1 Avenue South, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada T1J 4V6

2. Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, 773 General Services Building, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2H1

3. President's Office, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada A1C 5S7

Abstract

Woods, S. A., Dyck, M. F. and Kachanoski, R. G. 2013. Spatial and temporal variability of soil horizons and long-term solute transport under semi-arid conditions. Can. J. Soil Sci. 93: 173–191. Characterizing the spatial and temporal variability of deep drainage is required for quantifying risks to groundwater resources associated with chemicals released into the soil. A variety of approaches are available to characterize the spatial variability of deep drainage, including complex, spatially explicit hydrological models or simpler, distributed soil water balance models. There is no clear understanding which approach is most appropriate for a given landscape. In this paper we compare the spatial distribution of an applied chloride tracer to pedogenic nitrate and sulphate salts, subject to transport in the soil over decadal to millennial time scales, to characterize the relative spatial and temporal differences in deep drainage at a site in southern Saskatchewan. Comparison of the spatial distribution of the salts with differing soil residence times showed that the soil water balance and deep drainage fluxes have changed significantly over time in some parts of the landscape because of infilling of surface depressions as indicated by the presence of buried A horizons. At larger scales, the distribution of the salts showed very little correspondence to the spatial distribution and thicknesses of soil horizons (often used to infer spatial variability in soil water balance), but was more consistent with the scale of the surface topography. Thus it was concluded that spatial and temporal changes in surface topography (i.e., catchment area) were the primary factors responsible for the observed transport of the salts. We propose that this site is representative of the cold, semi-arid prairies and that these conclusions likely apply to this region.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Soil Science

Reference65 articles.

1. Acton, D. F. and Fehrenbacher, J. B. 1976. Mineralogy and topography of glacial tills and their effect on soil formation in Saskatchewan. Pages 170–185 in R. F. Legget, ed. Glacial till: an inter-disciplinary study. The Royal Society of Canada Spec. Publ. 12. Royal Society of Canada, Ottawa, ON.

2. Agriculture Canada Expert Committee on Soil Survey. 1987. The Canadian system of soil classification. 2nd ed. Agricylture Canada, Ottawa, ON. Publ. 1646.

3. The use of natural tracers as indicators of soil-water movement in a temperate semi-arid region

4. Vadose-Zone Techniques for Estimating Groundwater Recharge in Arid and Semiarid Regions

5. CALCULATION OF CARBONATE AND WATER MOVEMENT IN SOIL FROM CLIMATIC DATA

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