993 resultados para available water


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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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Pós-graduação em Geociências e Meio Ambiente - IGCE

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)

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Although highly weathered soils cover considerable areas in tropical regions, little is known about exploration by roots in deep soil layers. Intensively managed Eucalyptus plantations are simple forest ecosystems that can provide an insight into the belowground growth strategy of fast-growing tropical trees. Fast exploration of deep soil layers by eucalypt fine roots may contribute to achieving a gross primary production that is among the highest in the world for forests. Soil exploration by fine roots down to a depth of 10 m was studied throughout the complete cycle in Eucalyptus grandis plantations managed in short rotation. Intersects of fine roots, less than 1 mm in diameter, and medium-sized roots, 1-3 mm in diameter, were counted on trench walls in a chronosequence of 1-, 2-, 3.5-, and 6-year-old plantations on a sandy soil, as well as in an adjacent 6-year-old stand growing in a clayey soil. Two soil profiles were studied down to a depth of 10 m in each stand (down to 6 m at ages 1 and 2 years) and 4 soil profiles down to 1.5-3.0 m deep. The root intersects were counted on 224 m(2) of trench walls in 15 pits. Monitoring the soil water content showed that, after clear cutting, almost all the available water stored down to a depth of 7 m was taken up by tree roots within 1.1 year of planting. The soil space was explored intensively by fine roots down to a depth of 3 m from 1 year after planting, with an increase in anisotropy in the upper layers throughout the rotation. About 60% of fine root intersects were found at a depth of more than 1 m, irrespective of stand age. The root distribution was isotropic in deep soil layers and kriged maps showed fine root clumping. A considerable volume of soil was explored by fine roots in eucalypt plantations on deep tropical soils, which might prevent water and nutrient losses by deep drainage after canopy closure and contribute to maximizing resource uses.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fertigation management of gerbera crop has been many times performed inadequately, and it has been worsened when mixtures of substrates with different physical and chemical characteristics are used. Aiming at evaluating the production and quality of potted gerbera in two substrates and different levels of fertigation, the experiment was conducted in the greenhouse of the DRN/Soil Science, FCA/UNESP, Botucatu (SP). A 5 x 2 factorial randomized block design (5 levels of fertigation and 2 substrates) was adopted with 4 replications. Levels of fertigation corresponded to maintenance of 100% available water (AW) in the substrate; 100 to 80% of AW; 100 to 60% of AW; 100 to 40% of AW and 100 to 20% of AW. The substrates were as follows: 1- mixed coconut fiber (50% pellet coconut fiber and 50% coir fiber), 2- 40% red soil, 40% decomposed pine bark, 10% composition 1 (40% decomposed pine bark, 30% vermiculite and 30% carbonized rice husk) and 10% composition 2 (75% decomposed pine bark and 25% needles of pine). Plants at the marketing stage were evaluated according to the number of leaves; diameter of leaf surface; leaf area; fresh and dry phytomass of leaves, inflorescence and total plant; inflorescence number and diameter, stem diameter, plant height, leaf area rate and electrical conductivity of the substrate solution. Plants of better quality were obtained when they were maintained in levels of 100% available water and the mixed coconut fiber was used as substrate.

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O tamanho médio de partículas e a porosidade dos substratos condicionam as propriedades matriciais, interferindo na capacidade de retenção e de transmissão da água no meio. O conhecimento desses atributos é fundamental em processos de irrigação por capilaridade, para que o molhamento atinja as camadas superiores dos recipientes com níveis de tensão de água facilmente disponível. O presente trabalho teve como objetivo estudar a ascensão de água por capilaridade para determinar a posição mais apropriada do nível de saturação na ascensão capilar em recipientes com substratos de coco e pinus, de textura grossa e fina. Foram efetuados experimentos avaliando a ascensão de água por capilaridade em colunas segmentadas preenchidas com os substratos. Os valores de umidade em cada segmento foram calculados gravimetricamente e relacionados aos de tensão estimados pela curva de tensão dos substratos. Os substratos com textura fina apresentaram melhor elevação de água por capilaridade, com melhor elevação da umidade em níveis de tensão de água disponível. O substrato de coco fino apresentou água disponível em todo o perfil do recipiente, enquanto o de pinus apresentou as camadas superiores do recipiente com água retida em tensões abaixo do ponto de murcha permanente. O substrato fino de coco apresentou os melhores resultados para aplicação na irrigação por capilaridade, permitindo recomendar o seu uso com o nível de saturação posicionado a cinco centímetros do fundo do recipiente por quinze minutos.

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Assessment of soil disturbance on the Custer National Forest was conducted during two summers to determine if the U.S. Forest Service Forest Soil Disturbance Monitoring Protocol (FSDMP) was able to distinguish post-harvest soil conditions in a chronological sequence of sites harvested using different ground-based logging systems. Results from the first year of sampling suggested that the FSDMP point sampling method may not be sensitive enough to measure post-harvest disturbance in stands with low levels of disturbance. Therefore, a revised random transect method was used during the second sampling season to determine the actual extent of soil disturbance in these cutting units. Using combined data collected from both summers I detected statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) in fine fraction bulk density measurements between FSDMP disturbance classes across all sites. Disturbance class 3 (most severe) had the highest reported bulk density, which suggest that the FSDMP visual class estimates are defined adequately allowing for correlations to be made between visual disturbance and actual soil physical characteristics. Forest site productivity can be defined by its ability to retain carbon and convert it to above- and belowground biomass. However, forest management activities that alter basic site characteristics have the potential to alter productivity. Soil compaction is one critical management impact that is important to understand; compaction has been shown to impede the root growth potential of plants, reduce water infiltration rates increasing erosion potential, and alter plant available water and nutrients, depending on soil texture. A new method to assess ground cover, erosion, and other soil disturbances was recently published by the U.S. Forest Service, as the Forest Soil Disturbance Protocol (FSDMP). The FSDMP allows soil scientists to visually assign a disturbance class estimate (0 – none, 1, 2, 3 – severe) from field measures of consistently defined soil disturbance indicators (erosion, fire, rutting, compaction, and platy/massive/puddled structure) in small circular (15 cm) plots to compare soil quality properties pre- and post- harvest condition. Using this protocol we were able to determine that ground-based timber harvesting activities occurring on the Custer National Forest are not reaching the 15% maximum threshold for detrimental soil disturbance outlined by the Region 1 Soil Quality Standards.

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Organic amendments are commonly used to improve tree nursery soil conditions for increased seedling growth. However, few studies compare organic amendments effects on soil conditions, and fewer compare subsequent effects on seedling growth. The effects of three organic amendments on soil properties and seedling growth were investigated at the USDA Forest Service J.W. Toumey Nursery in Watersmeet, MI. Pine sawdust (red pine, Pinus resinosa), hardwood sawdust (maple, Acer spp. and aspen, Populus spp.), and peat were individually incorporated into a loamy sand nursery soil in August, 2006, and soil properties were sampled periodically for the next 14 months. Jack (Pinus banksiana), red, and white pine (Pinus strobus) were sown into test plots in June, 2007 and sampled for growth responses at the end of the growing season. It is hypothesized; pine sawdust and peat can be used as a satisfactory soil amendment to improve soil conditions and produce high quality seedlings, when compared to hardwood sawdust in bareroot nursery soils. This study has the potential to reduce nursery costs while broadening soil amendment options. The addition of peat and pine sawdust increased soil organic matter above control soil conditions after 14 months. However, hardwood sawdust-amended soils did not differ from control soils after same time period. High N concentrations in peat increased total soil N over the other treatments. Similarly, the addition of peat increased soil matric potential and available water over all other treatments. Seedlings grew tallest with the largest stem diameter, and had the largest biomass in both control soil and soil amended with peat, compared to either sawdust treatment. Seedlings grown in peat-amended soils had higher N concentrations than those grown in soils treated with pine sawdust, though neither was different from seedlings grown in control or hardwood sawdust-amended soils. Overall, peat is a well suited organic soil amendment for the enhancement of soil properties, but no amendments were able to increase one-year seedling growth over control soils.

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Watershed services are the benefits people obtain from the flow of water through a watershed. While demand for such services is increasing in most parts of the world, supply is getting more insecure due to human impacts on ecosystems such as climate or land use change. Population and water management authorities therefore require information on the potential availability of watershed services in the future and the trade-offs involved. In this study, the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) is used to model watershed service availability for future management and climate change scenarios in the East African Pangani Basin. In order to quantify actual “benefits”, SWAT2005 was slightly modified, calibrated and configured at the required spatial and temporal resolution so that simulated water resources and processes could be characterized based on their valuation by stakeholders and their accessibility. The calibrated model was then used to evaluate three management and three climate scenarios. The results show that by the year 2025, not primarily the physical availability of water, but access to water resources and efficiency of use represent the greatest challenges. Water to cover basic human needs is available at least 95% of time but must be made accessible to the population through investments in distribution infrastructure. Concerning the trade-off between agricultural use and hydropower production, there is virtually no potential for an increase in hydropower even if it is given priority. Agriculture will necessarily expand spatially as a result of population growth, and can even benefit from higher irrigation water availability per area unit, given improved irrigation efficiency and enforced regulation to ensure equitable distribution of available water. The decline in services from natural terrestrial ecosystems (e.g. charcoal, food), due to the expansion of agriculture, increases the vulnerability of residents who depend on such services mostly in times of drought. The expected impacts of climate change may contribute to an increase or decrease in watershed service availability, but are only marginal and much lower than management impacts up to the year 2025.

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La creciente demanda, en los últimos años, a nivel mundial y nacional de los productos deshidratados hace que esta actividad se perfile como promisoria en la región cuyana. Prácticamente el 100 % de la deshidratación de cebolla (Allium cepa L.) del país se realiza en Mendoza, habiendose hecho sólo producciones aisladas y de escaso volúmen en otras plantas del país. Las estimaciones preveen que se seguirá abasteciendo el mercado local y se incrementaránlas exportaciones de cebolla deshidratada. El objetivo general del presente trabajo fue establecer la influencia de la fertilización y el riego sobre la productividad y calidad de un cultivar mejorado de cebolla de importancia económica para la industria del deshidratado. En el Campo Experimental del INTA La Consulta se llevaron a cabo durante los años 1994-´95 y 1995-´96, dos ciclos de ensayos, con una línea de cebolla para deshidratar derivada del cultivar Southport White Globe. El suelo es de origen aluvial, profundo y de textura franca (Torrifluvente típico). Se determinaron los principales parámetros físicos, químicos e hídricos de la fracción fina del suelo. Para determinar el efecto de la fertilización sobre componentes de crecimiento y calidad y estudiar la variación de la concentración y ritmo de absorción de nutrimentos se ensayaron diferentes tratamientos. En el primer ciclo se ensayaron nueve tratamientos con tres niveles de N (0, 100, 200 kg N ha-1 ) aplicado como urea y tres niveles de P (0, 30, 60 kg P ha-1 ) como superfosfato. En el segundo ciclo se probaron ocho tratamientos con los siguientes niveles de N, P y K, respectivamente: (0 y 100 kg N ha-1), (0 y 40 kg P ha-1) y (0 y 60 kg K ha-1), éste último como sulfato de potasio. Para evaluar el efecto de diferentes regímenes de riego al final del ciclo de cultivo sobre la produccción cuantitativa y cualitativa de cebolla para la industria del deshidratado se programaron cortes anticipados de riegos, según diferentes fechas anteriores a la cosecha. Estas fueron para el primero y segundo ciclo de ensayo, respectivamente: (33, 27, 21, 8) y (21,14, 7) días anteriores a la fecha de cosecha estimada. Las principales conclusiones fueron: A) Con respecto a la fertilización: i) En todos los casos, e independientemente del tratamiento ensayado el mayor incremento relativo de sustancia seca aérea se evidencia durante la II fase de viii desarrollo que tiene lugar entre los primeros días de noviembre y mediados de diciembre ii) En dicha II fase se comienzan a manifestar incrementos absolutos de peso seco aéreo y área foliar atribuibles a la fertilización iii) También en todos los tratamientos se verifica que al finalizar la II fase el peso de los bulbos alcanza el 20 % de su peso de cosecha. En ese momento, los valores determinados para el porcentaje de sólidos totales (% ST) oscilan entre 13 % y 14 % iv) La mayor tasa de crecimiento del bulbo se constató en la III fase en la que se logra el 80% restante de su peso final v) En la III fase el % ST del bulbo sigue en aumento hasta casi el momento de cosecha y alcanzó valores promedios de 20 % y 21 %. La fertilización con diferentes dosis de N, P y K no influyó en el contenido de materia seca de los bulbos aunque sí lo hizo positivamente sobre su peso fresco vi) Los máximos rendimientos de bulbos (37.3 Mg ha-1) y de materia seca (7.92 Mg ha-1) se obtuvieron, en el segundo ciclo de ensayo, con las dosis de 100 kg N ha-1 y 40 kg P ha-1 vii) Los parámetros tisulares aéreos de valor diagnóstico asociados a máximosrendimientos, y al final de la II fase, correspondieron a una Alimentación Global (N, P, K) de 4.96 g % g s. seca y concentraciones de N, P y K respectivamente de: 2.56 g %, 0.22 g % y 2.18 g %. En cuanto a los tenores de Ca y Mg los porcentajes respectivos fueron: 2.10 g % y 0.16 g %. Los valores medios de equilibrios nutricionales fueron: N - P - K: 52 % - 4% - 44%. Con respecto a los micronutrimentos sus concentraciones fueron, en mg kg-1, Fe: 400, Zn: 55, Mn: 35 y Cu:19 y los valores de equilibrios nutricionales : 78.5 % - 11 % - 7 % - 3.5 %, respectivamente viii) La extracción total efectuada por el cultivo para esas máximas producciones, en kg ha-1, de N - P - K - Ca - Mg fueron: 214 - 40 -187 - 184 -19 B) Con respecto a los regímenes de riego: i) El rendimiento máximo obtenido -38.9 Mg ha-1- en el ensayo de cortes anticipados de riego correspondió al tratamiento R7 del ciclo 1995-‘96 ii) El mismo perteneció al tratamiento, que además de la fertilización básica con 100 kg N ha-1, aseguró durante los meses de noviembre, diciembre y enero, ix hasta siete días antes de cosecha, una humedad edáfica mínima (umbral de riego) correspondiente al 50 % del agua disponible. Este tratamiento se caracterizó por un total de 18 riegos y una incorporación de agua de 6120 m3 ha-1. iii) Los rendimientos totales de materia seca fueron afectados detrimentalmente por los otros regímenes de riego de cortes más anticipados iv) Se constató una relación lineal positiva altamente ignificativa entre el rendimiento y la lámina total de agua aplicada al cultivo.