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The hydraulic effect of plant roots reduces precipitation infiltration and enhances shallow slope stability. However, after root death and decay, soil permeability increases while water-retention capacity decreases. The time-varying mechanisms governing the hydraulic properties of root-soil composites after root decay remain unclear. This study examines the evolution of soil pore structure following root decay. A time-varying soil water retention curve (SWRC) model was developed to characterize changes in water-retention capacity. Additionally, a time-varying saturated infiltration coefficient model and a permeability coefficient prediction model were established to describe variations in hydraulic properties. A one-dimensional soil column infiltration test was conducted on root-soil composites at different stages of root decay to investigate the time-dependent changes in hydraulic properties. The reliability of the proposed models was validated using experimental results. The findings indicate the following: After root death, root biomass, diameter, length, and number decreased with increasing decay time, stabilizing after four months. Root decay led to a reduction in root volume ratio, which altered soil structure and enhanced the permeability of root-soil composites. Longer decay periods increased soil porosity, modifying the soil water characteristic curve and reducing water-retention capacity. Creeping roots decayed more significantly than fibrous roots due to their distinct morphological traits, making changes in hydraulic properties more pronounced in the topsoil. Therefore, plant root decay negatively affects soil hydraulic properties by continuously altering soil pore structure. These findings provide a crucial foundation for understanding the time-dependent mechanisms of hydraulic property variations in root-soil composites during plant root decay.

期刊论文 2025-09-01 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2025.133192 ISSN: 0022-1694

This paper aims to provide a state-of-the-art review on the effects of vegetation roots on the soil structure and soil hydraulic properties. After a thorough review of current studies, the effects of vegetation roots are summarized into four: root exudation, root penetration, root water uptake and root decay. Root exudates alter the size and stability of aggregates, the contact angle of soil, and the viscosity and surface tension of pore fluid; root exudates of crops always increase the soil water retention capacity and decrease the soil saturated hydraulic conductivity. Root penetration creates new pores or clogs existing pores during root growth, and root parameters (e.g., root biomass density, root diameter and root length density) are well correlated to soil hydraulic properties. Root water uptake can apparently increase the soil water retention capacity by providing an additional negative pressure and induce micro-fissures and macropores in the rhizosphere soil. Root decay modifies the pore structure and water repellency of soil, resulting in the increase of soil macro-porosity, soil water retention, and the saturated hydraulic conductivity or steady infiltration rate. Some of the above four effects may be difficult to be distinguished, and most importantly each is highly time-dependent and influenced by a multitude of plant-related and soil-related factors. Therefore, it remains a significant challenge to comprehend and quantify the effects of vegetation roots on the soil structure and soil hydraulic properties. Unsolved questions and disputes that require further investigations in the future are summarized in this review.

期刊论文 2024-01-01 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167524 ISSN: 0048-9697
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