Preferential flow and transport in soil: Progress and prognosis

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Abstract

Soil is the first filter of the world's water; its buffering and filtering determine the quality and quantity of our reserves of subterranean and surface water. Preferential flow can either enhance, or curtail, the capacity of the soil to buffer and filter, and it can compromise, or boost, other ecosystem services. We ask 'when do preferential flow and transport matter?' We identify 12 of 17 ecosystem services that benefit from preferential flow and three that are affected detrimentally. We estimate by simple arithmetic the value of preferential flow to ecosystem services to be globally some US$304 billion (109) per year. We review the 1989 Monte Verità meeting on preferential flow processes and summarize the 2006 presentations, some of which are published in this issue of the Journal. New technologies and innovative experiments have increased our understanding of the conditions that initiate and sustain preferential flows. We identify contemporary exigencies, and suggest avenues for their resolution. We are progressing through observation-led discovery. Our prognosis is that new data will enable us to develop better models, and more aptly to parameterize existing models, and thereby predict the impact, benefits and detriments of preferential flow in soil. © 2007 British Society of Soil Science.

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APA

Clothier, B. E., Green, S. R., & Deurer, M. (2008, February). Preferential flow and transport in soil: Progress and prognosis. European Journal of Soil Science. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2389.2007.00991.x

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