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research article

Stochastic modeling of salt accumulation in the root zone due to capillary flux from brackish groundwater

Shah, S. H. H.
•
Vervoort, R. W.
•
Suweis, S.  
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2011
Water Resources Research

[1] Groundwater can be a source of both water and salts in semiarid areas, and therefore, capillary pressure-induced upward water flow may cause root zone salinization. To identify which conditions result in hazardous salt concentrations in the root zone, we combined the mass balance equations for salt and water, further assuming a Poisson-distributed daily rainfall and brackish groundwater quality. For the water fluxes (leaching, capillary upflow, and evapotranspiration), we account for osmotic effects of the dissolved salt mass using Van't Hoff's law. Root zone salinity depends on salt transport via capillary flux and on evapotranspiration, which concentrates salt in the root zone. Both a wet climate and shallow groundwater lead to wetter root zone conditions, which in combination with periodic rainfall enhances salt removal by leaching. For wet climates, root zone salinity (concentrations) increases as groundwater is more shallow (larger groundwater influence). For dry climates, salinity increases as groundwater is deeper because of a drier root zone and less leaching. For intermediate climates, opposing effects can push the salt balance either way. Root zone salinity increases almost linearly with groundwater salinity. With a simple analytical approximation, maximum concentrations can be related to the mean capillary flow rate, leaching rate, water

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2010WR009790
Web of Science ID

WOS:000294782400001

Author(s)
Shah, S. H. H.
Vervoort, R. W.
Suweis, S.  
Guswa, A. J.
Rinaldo, A.  
van der Zee, S. E. A. T. M.
Date Issued

2011

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

47

Issue

9

Article Number

W09506

Subjects

Water-Controlled Ecosystems

•

Soil-Moisture Dynamics

•

Hydraulic Redistribution

•

Solute Transport

•

Eucalyptus-Camaldulensis

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Hydrologic Processes

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Active-Role

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Irrigation

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Vegetation

•

Salinity

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/73569
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