University of Belgrade - Faculty of Agriculture
AgroSpace - Faculty of Agriculture Repository
    • English
    • Српски
    • Српски (Serbia)
  • English 
    • English
    • Serbian (Cyrillic)
    • Serbian (Latin)
  • Login
View Item 
  •   AgroSpace
  • Poljoprivredni fakultet
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • View Item
  •   AgroSpace
  • Poljoprivredni fakultet
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention

No Thumbnail
Authors
Gajić, Boško
Dugalić, Goran
Sredojević, Zorica
Tomić, Zorica
Conference object (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
The objective of this study was to measure and compare soil-water infiltration, soil water retention and bulk density at three soil depths of non-carbonate silty clay gleyic fluvisol in the Kolubara river valley (West Serbia) under natural deciduous forest and meadow vegetation and the adjacent gleyic fluvisol used for more than 100 years as cultivated soil, with the same site conditions. Five infiltration measurement were made in each of three treatments. The results showes that the forest soil has the highest steady infiltration rate. The infiltration rate for the forest was about 2.5 times higher compared with the meadow and about 6 times higher compared with the cultivated soil. The soil water content for a selected pressure was the highest in the forest soil in the 0-15 cm depth compared with the meadow and cultivated soils. The meadow and cultivated soils did not show any significant (P lt 0.05) difference in soil water content at the 0.0, -33 and -1500 kPa pressure. Results sh...ow that the forest soil can accept and store more available water than meadow and cultivated soils in the 0-30 cm depth.

Keywords:
forest / meadow / tillage / fluvisol / infiltration / soil water retention / bulk density
Source:
Cereal Research Communications, 2008, 36, SUPPL. 5, 991-994

ISSN: 0133-3720

WoS: 000260963800080

Scopus: 2-s2.0-80053077175
[ Google Scholar ]
9
6
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629
URI
http://aspace.agrif.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1629
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Institution/Community
Poljoprivredni fakultet
TY  - CONF
AU  - Gajić, Boško
AU  - Dugalić, Goran
AU  - Sredojević, Zorica
AU  - Tomić, Zorica
PY  - 2008
UR  - http://aspace.agrif.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1629
AB  - The objective of this study was to measure and compare soil-water infiltration, soil water retention and bulk density at three soil depths of non-carbonate silty clay gleyic fluvisol in the Kolubara river valley (West Serbia) under natural deciduous forest and meadow vegetation and the adjacent gleyic fluvisol used for more than 100 years as cultivated soil, with the same site conditions. Five infiltration measurement were made in each of three treatments. The results showes that the forest soil has the highest steady infiltration rate. The infiltration rate for the forest was about 2.5 times higher compared with the meadow and about 6 times higher compared with the cultivated soil. The soil water content for a selected pressure was the highest in the forest soil in the 0-15 cm depth compared with the meadow and cultivated soils. The meadow and cultivated soils did not show any significant (P  lt  0.05) difference in soil water content at the 0.0, -33 and -1500 kPa pressure. Results show that the forest soil can accept and store more available water than meadow and cultivated soils in the 0-30 cm depth.
C3  - Cereal Research Communications
T1  - Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention
EP  - 994
IS  - SUPPL. 5
SP  - 991
VL  - 36
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Gajić, Boško and Dugalić, Goran and Sredojević, Zorica and Tomić, Zorica",
year = "2008",
abstract = "The objective of this study was to measure and compare soil-water infiltration, soil water retention and bulk density at three soil depths of non-carbonate silty clay gleyic fluvisol in the Kolubara river valley (West Serbia) under natural deciduous forest and meadow vegetation and the adjacent gleyic fluvisol used for more than 100 years as cultivated soil, with the same site conditions. Five infiltration measurement were made in each of three treatments. The results showes that the forest soil has the highest steady infiltration rate. The infiltration rate for the forest was about 2.5 times higher compared with the meadow and about 6 times higher compared with the cultivated soil. The soil water content for a selected pressure was the highest in the forest soil in the 0-15 cm depth compared with the meadow and cultivated soils. The meadow and cultivated soils did not show any significant (P  lt  0.05) difference in soil water content at the 0.0, -33 and -1500 kPa pressure. Results show that the forest soil can accept and store more available water than meadow and cultivated soils in the 0-30 cm depth.",
journal = "Cereal Research Communications",
title = "Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention",
pages = "994-991",
number = "SUPPL. 5",
volume = "36",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629"
}
Gajić, B., Dugalić, G., Sredojević, Z.,& Tomić, Z.. (2008). Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention. in Cereal Research Communications, 36(SUPPL. 5), 991-994.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629
Gajić B, Dugalić G, Sredojević Z, Tomić Z. Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention. in Cereal Research Communications. 2008;36(SUPPL. 5):991-994.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629 .
Gajić, Boško, Dugalić, Goran, Sredojević, Zorica, Tomić, Zorica, "Effect of different vegetation types on infiltration and soil water retention" in Cereal Research Communications, 36, no. SUPPL. 5 (2008):991-994,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_1629 .

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
About the AgroSpace Repository | Send Feedback

re3dataOpenAIRERCUB
 

 

All of DSpaceCommunitiesAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis institutionAuthorsTitlesSubjects

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
About the AgroSpace Repository | Send Feedback

re3dataOpenAIRERCUB