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Internal geophysics (Applied geophysics)
From spatial-continuous electrical resistivity measurements to the soil hydraulic functioning at the field scale
[Depuis la mesure spatialisée en continu de la résistivité électrique du sol jusqu’au fonctionnement hydrodynamique in situ]
Comptes Rendus. Géoscience, Volume 341 (2009) no. 10-11, pp. 859-867.

Résumés

The aim of this article is to present a strategy to interpret the hydraulic functioning of a small field area by using measurements of the soil electrical resistivity. The spatial soil electrical resistivity was recorded at a high resolution on a 2 ha area by the MultiContinous Electrical Profiling (MuCEP) device at two dates. These apparent electrical resistivity measurements were firstly interpreted in terms of local electrical resistivity by 1D inverse modelling to estimate the real resistivity of the soil. These interpreted electrical resistivity data were then transformed into soil water content values and soil water potential values by the use of independent punctual data of water content and the use of the water retention curve determined by laboratory data. Our analysis has permitted us to describe the spatial variability and temporal evolution of the hydraulic functioning at high resolution from electrical resistivity data. The interpretation of the water content and matric potential maps demonstrated that some soil hydraulic processes, such as lateral overland flow, can occur in the studied zone. They would never have been detected by local measurements of soil characteristics or by the use of the soil map.

Ces travaux ont pour objectif de proposer une stratégie permettant de discuter du fonctionnement hydrodynamique des sols à l’échelle parcellaire, à partir de mesures spatiales de la résistivité électrique. Celle-ci a été mesurée à deux dates, sur une parcelle de 2 ha, à l’aide du MultiContinous Electrical Profiling (MuCEP). Ces mesures électriques ont été analysées localement par un modèle 1D, de façon à estimer la résistivité vraie du sol, puis les données de résistivité vraie ont été interprétées en termes de teneur en eau et de potentiel matriciel, à l’aide de mesures ponctuelles de teneur en eau et de la courbe de rétention des sols étudiés, déterminée de façon indépendante au laboratoire. Cette analyse a permis de décrire la distribution spatiale et l’évolution temporelle de la teneur en eau du sol à haute résolution. L’interprétation des cartes de teneur en eau et de potentiel matriciel met en évidence certains processus hydrodynamiques, tels que des écoulements latéraux hypodermiques. Ceux-ci n’auraient pu être détectés par des mesures ponctuelles de teneur en eau et n’auraient pu être inférés à partir de la carte des sols de la parcelle.

Métadonnées
Reçu le :
Accepté le :
Publié le :
DOI : 10.1016/j.crte.2009.07.011
Keywords: Digital soil functioning mapping, Field scale, Soil water content, Soil water potential, DC geophysical method
Mot clés : Cartographie numérique de fonctionnement du sol, Étude in situ, Teneur en eau du sol, Potentiel en eau du sol, Méthode géophysique en courant continu

Isabelle Cousin 1 ; Arlène Besson 1, 2 ; Hocine Bourennane 1 ; Catherine Pasquier 1 ; Bernard Nicoullaud 1 ; Dominique King 1 ; Guy Richard 1

1 Inra, UR0272 Science du Sol, centre de recherche d’Orléans, CS40001 Ardon, 45075 Orléans cedex 2, France
2 Department of Environmental Sciences and Land Use Planning, Université Catholique de Louvain, Croix du Sud 2 box 2, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
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     author = {Isabelle Cousin and Arl\`ene Besson and Hocine Bourennane and Catherine Pasquier and Bernard Nicoullaud and Dominique King and Guy Richard},
     title = {From spatial-continuous electrical resistivity measurements to the soil hydraulic functioning at the field scale},
     journal = {Comptes Rendus. G\'eoscience},
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Isabelle Cousin; Arlène Besson; Hocine Bourennane; Catherine Pasquier; Bernard Nicoullaud; Dominique King; Guy Richard. From spatial-continuous electrical resistivity measurements to the soil hydraulic functioning at the field scale. Comptes Rendus. Géoscience, Volume 341 (2009) no. 10-11, pp. 859-867. doi : 10.1016/j.crte.2009.07.011. https://comptes-rendus.academie-sciences.fr/geoscience/articles/10.1016/j.crte.2009.07.011/

Version originale du texte intégral

1 Introduction

In the context of precision agriculture, the understanding of the soil hydraulic functioning at a high spatial resolution is required to adapt the water supplies to plant demand, whatever its position in the field. To describe the spatial hydraulic functioning, one can analyse the temporal evolution of the spatial distribution of the water content, or, better, of the water potential. The initial problem is then to provide a way of producing a map of the water content.

One way is to use point measurements of the water content, which are then interpolated. The quality of the estimated map depends on the sampling density of the water content measurements. Usually, the latter are scarce because they are destructive and time-consuming.

A second way is to use ancillary data to provide information on the soil properties. Such data include yield from yield monitors, digital information from aerial photographs, electromagnetic induction data, elevation, and so on [3–5,7,17,18,23,24]. They are usually more intensive, and less expensive to obtain than the soil properties. Among these ancillary data, we focus here on the measurements from electrical resistivity sensors whose use is becoming more widespread in surveys for land management. The apparent electrical resistivity of the soil is related to several soil physical properties, and especially the moisture content: a wetter soil is more electrically conductive than a drier soil [11,16]. Previous studies have shown the value of using the electrical resistivity to assess the soil water content [6,21]. Thanks to the MultiContinuous Electrical Profiling (MuCEP) device, exhaustive spatial measurements of the electrical resistivity can be recorded with a high resolution [8]. A map of the electrical resistivity can then be used as an external drift in the kriging procedure to map water content from punctual measurements. Bourennane et al. [6] showed that the estimated map of water content is of better quality than the one produced without the use of the electrical resistivity.

A third way to analyse the spatial hydraulic functioning of soil is to describe the temporal variability of the electrical resistivity between several maps taken at different dates. If the maps have been corrected for the effects of temperature – which strongly influences the electrical resistivity measurements – the differences between these maps can only result from the evolution of the water content, once we have checked that the composition of the soil solution is not a first-order parameter that influences the electrical resistivity. Using this procedure, Besson et al. [2] showed that the temporal evolution of the water content at the field scale can be predicted by analysing the temporal evolution of electrical resistivity data.

A fourth way to use the information on water content included in the electrical resistivity signal, would be to interpret the apparent resistivity data into real resistivity data and to determine the water content by using a model of the relationship between the real resistivity and the water content. The latter could then be interpreted in terms of matric potential if we know the water retention curve of the studied soil horizon. This paper aims at testing this method of providing maps of the soil water content and soil matric potential by using scarce measurements of the water content and maps of the apparent electrical resistivity.

2 Material and methods

2.1 General outline of the study

From the spatial electrical resistivity measurements to the spatial estimation of the water potential, our study consisted of four steps (Fig. 1):

  • 1. the apparent electrical resistivity was measured at three pseudo-depths by the MuCEP device at the field scale at two dates during the year 2006 (see section 2.3);
  • 2. the apparent resistivity data were modelled by 1D inverse modelling to produce a true resistivity map that represents the spatial distribution of the resistivity of a specific soil layer (see section 2.4). The interpreted resistivity data were then corrected for the temperature effect by the Keller and Frischknecht equation [12], so that the resistivity measurements obtained at the two dates could be compared;
  • 3. the interpreted resistivity map was transformed into a map of water content by using an empirical relationship between electrical resistivity and water content. This relationship was determined from field measurements during one year of both the electrical resistivity – by electrical tomography (ERT) – and the soil water content, by TDR probes (see section 2.5);
  • 4. finally, the water content map was interpreted in terms of water potential thanks to a water retention curve. The latter was determined by laboratory measurements and expressed according to the van Genuchten equation (see section 2.6). It is really important to use the data up to this stage, and not to stop the analysis at the 3rd stage. Indeed, the evolution of the water content alone does not help to interpret the hydraulic functioning, for example, the drying or wetting processes in the soil, or the infiltration versus runoff processes.

Fig. 1

General sketch of the study.

Démarche générale de l’étude.

2.2 Characteristics of the studied area

The study site is located in the Beauce region (France), in a fallow field of 2 ha. The soils consisted of a loamy-clay layer developed over the Beauce limestone bedrock or the cryoturbed or soft limestone deposits. They were haplitic or calcaric cambisols [9] and were classified into several units according to both the bedrock where they have developed, and the thickness of the loamy-clay layer. Thirty-three auger holes were dug to: (1) describe the different soil horizons; (2) define the thickness of the loamy clay-layer; and (3) measure the gravimetric water content in each soil horizon. To describe the evolution of the soil water content at the field scale, this sampling was done twice: on the 12th of April 2006 and the 1st of June 2006. From the analysis of the soil in the auger holes, eight soil units were defined on a soil map (Fig. 2a). The thickness of the loamy-clay layer was determined on the whole studied surface area by ordinary kriging. It varied from 0.3 m (very shallow soils developed in the south-eastern part of the studied zone) to 0.85 m (deep soils in the North-West part of the studied area) (Fig. 2b).

Fig. 2

Spatial pattern of the data recorded and calculated on the studied area. -a- Soil map of the studied area. -b- Map of the loamy-clay layer thickness. -c, ć- Apparent electrical resistivity measurements for the three arrays (c: 12th of April 2006; ć: 1st of June 2006). -d, d́- Interpreted electrical resistivity for the loamy-clay layer and the bedrock (d: 12th of April 2006; d́: 1st of June 2006). -e, é- Map of the volumetric water content on the studied area (e: 12th of April 2006; e’: 1st of June 2006). -f, f́- Map of the water potential on the studied area (f: 12th of April 2006; f́: 1st of June 2006).

Représentation spatiale de l’ensemble des résultats obtenus sur la zone d’étude. -a- Carte des sols de la zone étudiée. -b- Carte de l’épaisseur de la couche argilo-limoneuse. -c, ć- Cartes de la résistivité apparente à trois pseudoprofondeurs (c : 12 avril 2006; ć : 1er juin 2006). -d, d’- Cartes de la résistivité interprétée pour la couche argilo-limoneuse et pour le substrat calcaire (d : 12 avril 2006; d́ : 1er juin 2006). -e, é- Cartes de la teneur en eau volumique (e : 12 avril 2006 ; e’ : 1er juin 2006). -f, f’- Cartes du potentiel en eau des sols étudiés (f : 12 avril 2006 ; f́ : 1er juin 2006).

2.3 Spatial monitoring of the electrical resistivity at the field scale

Electrical resistivity measurements were obtained at the field scale by the use of the MuCEP device [2,8,20]. which is a mobile soil electrical resistivity mapping system, that comprises a multi-probe system of three arrays (V1, V2, V3 arrays) pulled by a cross-country vehicle. The distance between the current injection electrodes and the resistivity measurement electrodes is 0.5 m for the V1 array, 1 m for the V2 array and 2 m for the V3 array. This system is completed by a resistivity meter (10 mA, 122 Hz) and a Doppler radar which triggers a measurement every 0.1 m along an electrical transect. The electrical measurements consist of apparent resistivity measurements for three pseudo-depths. All measurements were georeferenced and recorded on a PC. The electrical resistivity measurements with the MuCEP system were recorded at the same dates as the characterisation by the auger holes, i.e., on the 12th of April and the 1st of June 2006. At each date and for each array, a minimum of 52,000 measurements were recorded.

2.4 Inversion of the apparent resistivity data recorded by the MuCEP device

For each date, the electrical resistivity of the loamy-clay layer was modelled from the three sets of apparent electrical resistivity measurements by a 1D inverse model. The QWIN1D software was used. It was developed at the University of Paris VI (France) and used the Levenberg-Marquadt optimisation algorithm. The inverse process was constrained by: (1) a conceptual model of the electrical resistivity distribution on the vertical plan; and (2) the loamy-clay layer thickness. The conceptual model consisted of two layers with a contrasted electrical resistivity: the loamy-clay layer with a resistivity (parameter1) of ∼30 ohm m in April and ∼70 ohm m in June, and the limestone bedrock with a resistivity (parameter2) of ∼400 ohm m. These electrical resistivity values were chosen from the analysis of 2D electrical resistivity tomographies (ERT) realised at two different locations in the studied area (Fig. 2b). From the thickness of the loamy-clay layer determined from the 33 auger holes, the studied area was divided into 12 parts for which the thickness of the loamy-clay layer could be considered constant. For each part, the inverse process was conducted independently: the thickness of the loamy-clay layer was fixed and its electrical resistivity and that of the limestone bedrock were calculated and optimised from the initial values mentioned above. The electrical resistivity of the loamy-clay layer was then corrected for the temperature effect by the Keller and Frischknecht equation [13] at a reference temperature of 25 °C.

2.5 Local monitoring of the electrical resistivity and of the water content

To determine the field relationship between the electrical resistivity and the water content, a 2D electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) experiment was conducted once a week during the year 2006, at two locations in the studied area (Fig. 2b). The electrical resistivity measurements were made with a Syscal R1 Plus resistivity meter and a switch module (Iris Instrument, France) connected to 32 electrodes spaced 0.2 m apart, in Wenner Alpha array, as a good compromise between spatial resolution and sensitivity to noise. The electrical tomographies were always located in the same position in the field. The smoothness-constrained inversion of the data sets was achieved with a time lapse inversion technique by using the Res2DInv software [14,15]. The same background model as mentioned in section 2.4 was used to constrain the inverse process. We thus determined the real electrical resistivity of the loamy-clay layer at each measurement date and at different depths along the soil profile. These data were corrected for the temperature effect by the Keller and Frischknecht equation [12] at a reference temperature of 25 °C. Calibrated TDR probes were installed near the site of the electrical tomographies and the water content was recorded at different depths of the loamy-clay layer (–12, –15, –20, –34, –40 cm depth) at each date of the electrical tomographies measurements. Mean values of electrical resistivity and water content were calculated for the loamy-clay layer. We decided to work on mean values because of statistical dispersion of the electrical data. The latter resulted from field experiments and might be noise because of soil structural heterogeneities (fauna activity, cracks in summer). Mean values enabled us to smooth this variability. Thanks to these data, an empirical relationship between the field electrical resistivities and the field water contents was determined. As demonstrated in Fig. 3, it consisted of a logarithmic decreasing curve; its determination coefficient was 0.85 which indicated the robustness of this empirical law in the studied area.

Fig. 3

Relationship between the interpreted electrical resistivity – ERT inverted by the Res2DInv software – and the volumetric water content – recorded by TDR probes – (the locations of the measurements are the stations A and B on the Fig. 2b). The number of data is equal to 46.

Relation entre la résistivité électrique – issue des tomographies de résistivités électriques (ERT) inversées par le logiciel Res2DInv – et la teneur en eau volumique enregistrée par les sondes TDR (la position de ces mesures est située sur les stations A et B, visibles sur la Fig. 2b). Le nombre de données est égal à 46.

2.6 Determination of the water retention curve of the loamy-clay layer

The relationship between the water content and the water potential was determined by laboratory measurements on small undisturbed loamy-clay clods of about 5 cm3, sampled in the studied are. Each soil aggregate was first saturated and then allowed to reach equilibrium at a given water potential during five days [13]. The mass and volumetric water content were then determined after the aggregate was dried at 105 °C for 24 hours. The volumetric water content was determined on 12 aggregates for eight values of water potentials: –10 hPa; – 33 hPa; – 100 hPa; –330 hPa; –1000 hPa; –3330 hPa; – 10000 hPa; –15280 hPa. From these punctual measurements, a continuous water retention curve was determined according to the model of van Genuchten [22]:

h=1αθθs11/n11/n
where h represents the water potential (hPa) and θ the volumetric water content (cm3 cm−3). For the loamy-clay layer of our studied area, the parameters of the van Genuchten equation were the following: θs = 0.42 cm3 cm−3; α = 0.00497 m−1; n = 1.17.

3 Results and discussion

3.1 Spatial distribution of the apparent and interpreted electrical resistivity data

For the two dates of investigation (12th of April 2006 and the 1st of June 2006), the resistivity of the studied area varied in space at the field scale. For the two dates, the mean apparent resistivity value of the V1 array was lower than that of the V2 array, which was lower than that of the V3 array (Table 1). This was related to the deepening investigation volume from the V1 array to the V3 array and to the fact that the bedrock was more resistant than the superficial loamy-clay layer. Whatever the date, the V1 array showed the highest apparent resistivity values in the south-eastern part of the studied area, in soil unit number 8 (stony calcaric cambisol on hard limestone bedrock) (Fig. 2c and ć). Intermediate values were observed in the north-western part of the studied area, in soil unit number 3 (shallow calcaric cambisol on cryoturbed limestone deposit). The lowest values were found along a corridor from south to north in the middle of the area and in the northern part of the studied zone (soil unit number 1, deep haplitic cambisol on cryoturbed limestone deposit). Depending on the array (V1, V2 or V3), this spatial organisation was more or less distinct. Whatever the array, the general apparent resistivity of the studied area was lower on the 12th of April 2006 than on the 1st of June 2006, due to a higher water content in April than in June (Table 1).

Table 1

Synthèse des données expérimentales : valeurs minimum et maximum (en italique), valeurs moyennes (en gras) et écart-type (entre parenthèses).

12th April 2006 1st June 2006
Apparent resistivity (ohm m)
V1 array 2237 (± 9)–93 2658 (± 21)–158
V2 array 3657 (± 12)–127 4176 (± 19)–154
V3 array 64113 (± 16)–203 94139 (± 18)–225
Interpreted resistivity (ohm m) 1526 (± 4)–47 2646 (± 12)–99
Volumetric water content (cm3 cm-3) 0.230.28 (± 0.01)–0.33 0.160.24 (± 0.02)–0.28
Water potential (|log hPa|) 2.833.29 (± 0.14)–3.83 3.29–3.79 (± 0.24)–4.72

The resistivity of the loamy-clay layer – determined after inversion from the apparent resistivity data – was highly variable in space (Fig. 2d and d́, Table 1). In April 2006, the values ranged between 15 ohm m and 47 ohm m and in June 2006 they ranged between 26 ohm m and 99 ohm m. The spatial organisation was the same for the two dates – the highest values in the south-eastern part, the lowest values in the central zone and intermediate values in the north-western part of the field – and it was remarkable for two reasons:

  • 1 this spatial distribution was not exactly the same as the spatial distribution of the apparent resistivity data, which indicated – as expected – that the bedrock had a strong influence on the general value of the apparent electrical resistivity (Fig. 2d and d́);
  • 2 the spatial distribution of the interpreted resistivity data was not the same as the spatial distribution of the loamy-clay layer thickness: the two areas with the lowest thickness of loamy-clay material – i.e., the south-eastern and central parts – corresponded respectively to areas with the highest interpreted electrical resistivity data and the lowest interpreted resistivity data. As a consequence, the spatial organisation of the interpreted resistivity data did not result from artefacts of inversion, due to the parameter “thickness of the loamy-clay layer” as might have been expected.

Whereas the two sources of data (loamy-clay layer thickness and electrical resistivity) do not have the same resolution, the two points mentioned above emphasize the interest of the inversion of spatial electrical resistivity data recorded by the MuCEP device in order to interpret specifically the organisation of the loamy-clay layer.

3.2 Spatial distribution of the volumetric water content and of the water potential

From the inverse relationship between the electrical resistivity data recorded by 2D tomography and the volumetric water content measured by TDR probes (Fig. 3), the map of the interpreted electrical resistivity was converted firstly into a map of volumetric water content (Fig. 2e and é) and secondly into a map of water potential by using the van Genuchten model (Fig. 2f and f́). As the electrical resistivity, the water content and water potential presented a specific spatial distribution: for the two dates, the highest water content corresponded to the location in the central area of the studied zone. In April, the water content reached a value of 0.33 cm3 cm−3 that was close to field capacity (Table 1). Conversely, in June and in the south-eastern part of the studied area, the water content was low, and even reached values around 0.16 cm3 cm−3 that corresponded to a water potential higher than the permanent wilting point (Table 1). The contrast in terms of water content and water potential was significant for the two dates: indeed, the water content varied from 0.23 to 0.33 cm3 cm−3 in April whereas it varied from 0.16 to 0.28 cm3 cm−3 in June (Table 1). The water potential was highly contrasted in June, from values close to 2.8 (log hPa), to values higher than the permanent wilting point.

The comparison between the soil map and the maps of the volumetric water content and water potential inspired two comments:

  • 1- the spatial distribution of the soil water content was roughly related to the distribution of soils: the lowest water content corresponded to the shallowest soils in the south-eastern part of the studied area (soil unit 8), whereas the high values of water content corresponded to the deeper soils in its northern part (soil units 1 and 2);
  • 2- by carefully examining the soil map and the map of the water content, one could identify zones where the boundaries of the water content areas did not correspond to those of the soil units. This was specifically the case in the central part of the studied area: the water content was high and corresponded to four soil types (soil units 1-3-4-5) with deep soils and shallow soils. This central zone had a particular topographical position on the site. It corresponded to the lowest elevation within the studied zone and to the sharp limit between the cryoturbated or soft limestone deposits and the hard calcareous bedrock of the south-eastern part of the field. In the same way, a zone oriented NW-SE in the northern part of the area corresponded to lower water contents than the mean water content of this area (Fig. 2e and é, see the arrow). It was located on two different soil types (soil units 2 and 3) but one can see that it was located on a low topographic position, along a line oriented NW-SE. The water could probably evacuate from this position, either by runoff or by hypodermic transfer, and could accumulate in the neighbouring zones.

As a consequence, the map of the soil types constituted a real basis for the description of the soil hydraulic functioning but, even in this region where the water transfer has been demonstrated to be essentially vertical [19], the water could accumulate by lateral transfer. This point is of importance for the description of the soil system in simulations of the water transfer. It could not have been demonstrated without the recording of the spatial electrical resistivity by the MuCEP device.

3.3 Discussion of the uncertainty

From the apparent resistivity data to the water potential, three steps were necessary and might lead to uncertainty in the final results. The general analysis of the uncertainties was not conducted here but we can discuss a few points. The uncertainty may have different sources. The first one is the determination of the interpreted resistivity map from apparent electrical resistivity data and the map of the loamy-clay layer thickness. The quality of this step is a priori difficult to evaluate, but one can consider that no sharp limit can be observed between the different zones taken into account for the inversion. Although the map of the loamy-clay thickness was divided into 12 zones for the inversion, the interpreted resistivity map exhibits continuous shapes without sharp limits, i.e., without any abrupt changes.

The second source of uncertainty may be due to the procedure used to calculate the water content from the electrical resistivity. We decided to use field data obtained by 2D tomography at a 0.2 m resolution for the electrical resistivity and TDR measurements for the water content. This approach was original compared to more classical approaches found in the literature where the water content is estimated from the Archie's law [1,10]. We decided to use this empirical relationship because: (1) Archie's law is not valid for soils with a clay content higher than 15 % like those found on the studied site, and (2) we wanted to avoid discrepancies between laboratory data and field measurements that are commonly observed with electrical resistivity measurements and that are due to the difference of soil volumes that are taken into account. The comparison between the volumetric water content measured in the auger holes during the geophysical prospecting and the water content estimated at the same points from the interpreted electrical resistivity map showed good agreement, with a root mean square error equal to 0.02 cm3 cm−3 (Fig. 4). It validates both the protocol of inversion of apparent electrical resistivity data and the estimation of the water content from the relationship derived from tomography data albeit with two restrictions: (i) one could expect that the estimation of the water content from electrical resistivity data would not be precise enough for the high water contents, close to saturation; (ii) the main hypothesis for the calculation of the water content from the electrical resistivity consists in assuming that the loamy-clay layer is homogeneous in texture across the entire studied area. This point has been checked at the location of the auger holes, where the soil was sampled; it could be different elsewhere.

Fig. 4

Comparison between the volumetric water content measured in the field on the auger holes, and the water content estimated at these points from the interpreted resistivity map (each point of estimated water content is calculated from the estimated values in a circle of 1 m diameter around the position of the auger hole).

Comparaison entre la teneur en eau volumique mesurée au champ lors de la prospection à la tarière et la teneur en eau volumique estimée en ces mêmes points, à partir de la carte de résistivité interprétée (chaque point de teneur en eau estimée résulte de l’interpolation des estimations de la teneur en eau sur un cercle de 1 m autour de la position du point de sondage).

The third source of uncertainty may be attributed to the procedure for calculating the water potential from the volumetric water content. To avoid discrepancies between the laboratory and the field measurements due to differences in size of the soil samples, it would probably have been better to measure directly the water potential in the field, during the 2D tomography experiments. Unfortunately, the tensiometers that can be installed in the field do not record water potential values larger than |–800 hPa|. It would not have been sufficient to establish a consistent relationship between the water content and the water potential. At this stage, we do not have any tool to validate the transformation of water content into water potential.

4 Conclusion

This work is a first attempt at evaluating the spatial distribution of the soil water content and the soil water potential at the field scale with a high spatial resolution, without any a priori knowledge of the studied area. From our knowledge, the way in which this study was carried out, from the field measurements of the electrical resistivity to the validation of the estimation of the water content, is original.

In our study, we have shown that the soil map, defined from permanent soil characteristics, for example, the soil texture and the soil structure, is – in a first approximation – a pertinent spatial support to model the soil hydraulic functioning. To precisely describe the water fluxes, the topography has to be taken into account.

This work was conducted as a demonstration and is supported by the comparison of water soil maps at two dates, both during the drying period. It should be completed by other spatial data recorded throughout the hydrologic season, including some periods of wetting and drying. The next step would be to determine the spatial hydrodynamic properties of the soils in the studied area by inverse modelling using the successive maps of soil water content. It would provide a new nonintrusive and without a priori method to estimate the spatial soil hydrodynamic properties.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank P. Courtemanche, A. Dorigny, G. Giot and C. Lelay from the Unité de Science du Sol of INRA Orléans for their assistance during the field experiments. They are grateful to the French programme PNRH for financial support.


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