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Main water pathways in cultivated clayey calcisols in molassic hills in southwestern France: Toward spatialization of soil waterlogging.

Authors :
Trochon, Benjamin
Bustillo, Vincent
Caner, Laurent
Pasquet, Sylvain
Suc, Virginie
Granouillac, Franck
Probst, Anne
Probst, Jean‐Luc
Tallec, Tiphaine
Guiresse, Maritxu
Source :
Vadose Zone Journal; Sep2023, Vol. 22 Issue 5, p1-20, 20p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Local waterlogging often occurs on the steep slopes of clayey–calcareous soils in southwestern France, causing nutrients and pollutants transfer to the river bodies and reduced ecosystems services. These soils developed in the Miocene molassic hill formation and are generally impermeable with abundant traces of hydromorphy and heterogenous spatial distribution. This article aims to describe the hydrological functioning of these soils, based on a cross analysis of pedological, hydrological, and geophysical characterizations. Our experimental site is the catchment area located in Auradé (southwestern France). Here, we analyze the flows at the outlet of the studied watershed together with piezometric and climatic monitoring from September 2020 to September 2021. We show that the hydrological year is divided into three phases: first, a soil recharge phase with an effective rainfall of about 100 mm; second, a saturation phase, when 80% of the effective precipitation is drained mostly by runoff and hypodermic flows; third, a drying phase. Soil waterlogging events usually occur during the saturation phase. They are due to several forms of flow: surface runoff associated with return flow, hypodermic flow caused by the presence of soil layers with lower hydraulic conductivity in the subsurface (swelling clays and plowing sole) and groundwater flow with intermittent connection of the soil water table in the hillside to the alluvial groundwater table. We also conducted independent seismic refraction tomography analyses that validate localized waterlogging patterns along the catchment and open the way to spatializing areas with high waterlogging potential at the scale of the study plot. Core Ideas: An interdisciplinary approach (pedology, hydrology, and geophysics) highlights flow paths in hilly calcisols.Seismic geophysics reveals heterogeneities of the molasse material that drives intermittent downslope connectivity.Soil porosity value around 100 mm both corresponds to the soils water adsorption and water supply capacities.The sand lens acts like a local captive aquifer for a period of 4 months starting in winter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15391663
Volume :
22
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Vadose Zone Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171903817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20272