Article,

Combined 2D- and 3D ERT monitoring as a geophysical tool for investigating spatial and temporal soil moisture fluctuations in a pine-beech forest

, and .
Trees, Forests and People, (2024)
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tfp.2024.100555

Abstract

As climate change continues, forests are increasingly suffering from drought stress, which is leading to widespread forest dieback, but also to increased mortality of individual trees. In this regard, the impact of small-scale differences in water availability on individual trees has not yet been sufficiently studied to determine possible responses of different tree species to future droughts. Since conventional soil moisture monitoring and sampling methods only consider single points or small volumes, Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) is becoming increasingly important to cover a larger survey area and to detect small-scale heterogeneities with regard to soil properties and soil moisture. The current study describes the application of a combined two- and three-dimensional geoelectrical monitoring approach with daily measurements over two years (May 2021 – April 2023) in a forest ecosystem in Lower Franconia (northwestern Bavaria, Germany), which is strongly affected by climate change. Soil water content, soil matric potential, throughfall, and stem flow are also measured at the forest site as well as precipitation at an adjacent forest clearing. The seasonally (long-term) and precipitation-driven (short-term) temporal change of soil resistivity is correlated strongly with the measured soil water content and matric potential. The applied 3D-ERT approach also allowed a first three-dimensional monitoring of the subsurface below a European beech located in the middle of the measuring grid with a daily resolution. The corresponding results also provide first indications that besides soil moisture changes also chemical processes in the subsurface may influence temporal resistivity changes in the soil of forest sites. The results of this study show that daily 3D-ERT is very suitable for investigating small-scale as well as short- and long-term variations in soil moisture, which is becoming increasingly important for understanding the causal relationships considering tree mortality and the subsurface.

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