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THE WATER BALANCE OF AN AGRICULTURAL CATCHMENT. I. ESTIMATION OF EVAPORATION FROM SOIL WATER RECORDS
Authors:M. McGOWAN  J. B. WILLIAMS
Affiliation:University of Nottingham School of Agriculture, Sutton Bonington, Loughborough LE12 5RD
Abstract:Errors of measurement of soil water content with the neutron probe can be made small enough for most water balance studies; and apart from the possible damage resulting from access tube implacement, they can be readily specified. A more important problem is estimating how much water is lost from soil by drainage. A simple, graphical method is described to distinguish between drainage and evaporation from soil, based upon identification of the maximum depth at which measurable quantities of water are extracted by roots. As a result of errors in soil water measurements and uncertainties in the distinction between drainage and evaporation, estimates of soil water deficit and hence evaporation for a single profile are likely to have a precision of about ±5 mm. Larger variability is commonly found in soil water storage changes measured in replicate profiles partly because of uneven wetting of the soil during rain and partly because of non-uniform losses by drainage and root extraction. This variability requires careful attention to replication and location of access tubes when assessing the evaporation for a particular site.
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