Water uptake from different soil depths for halophytic shrubs grown in Northern area of Ningxia plain (China) in contrasted water regimes

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Abstract

In order to understand the contributions of groundwater and deep soil water to the growth of halophytes in salinity-affected area, water use strategies of four shrubes, i.e. 20-year-old Tamarix ramosissima Ledeb., three-year-old T. ramosissima., Lycium barbarum L., and Atriplex canescens (Pursh) Nutt. were studied under contrasted water regimes in Northwest China. The result showed that there was a vertical gradient in soil δ18O and δD profiles resulted from evaporation and irrigation. The 20-year-old T. ramosissima mainly used water from middle (40-140 cm) and deep (140-200 cm) under both water regimes indicating its phreatophytic nature. Soil water in upper profile (0-40 cm) was the dominant water source for the three-year-old T. ramosissima before irrigation. After irrigation, the three-year-old T. ramosissima and L. barbarum switched their water sources to middle soil profile. Our experiment revealed phreatophytic tendency for the three-year-old A. canescens, which was not responsive to irrigation enlighten by photosynthetic parameters and stem water potentials. © 2012 Taylor & Francis.

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Zhu, L., Wang, Z. H., Mao, G. L., Zheng, S. X., & Xu, X. (2014). Water uptake from different soil depths for halophytic shrubs grown in Northern area of Ningxia plain (China) in contrasted water regimes. Journal of Plant Interactions, 9(1), 26–34. https://doi.org/10.1080/17429145.2012.751139

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