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Hydraulic redistribution is considered a crucial dryland mechanism that may be important in temperate environments facing increased soil drying-wetting cycles. We investigated redistribution of soil water from deeper, moist to surface, dry soils in a mature mixed European beech forest and whether redistributed water was used by neighbouring native seedlings. In two experiments, we tracked hydraulic redistribution via (1) H labeling and (2) O natural abundance. In a throughfall exclusion experiment, H water was applied to 30-50 cm soil depth around mature beech trees and traced in soils, in coarse and fine roots, and in the rhizosphere. On five additional natural plots, the O signal was measured in seedlings of European beech, Douglas fir, silver fir, sycamore maple, and Norway spruce at dawn and noon after a rain-free period. We found a significant enrichment in H in surface soil fine roots of mature beech, and an indication for transfer of this water into their rhizosphere, suggesting hydraulic redistribution from deeper, moist to drier surface soils. On four of the five additional plots, δO of seedlings' root water was lower at dawn than at noon. This indicated that dawn root water originated from soil layers deeper than the seedlings' rooting depth, suggesting hydraulic redistribution by neighbouring mature trees. Hydraulic redistribution equated to about 10% of daily transpiration in mature beech trees, and contributed to root water in understory seedlings, emphasizing hydraulic redistribution as a notable mechanism in temperate forests. Transport mechanisms and potential of different tree species to redistribute water should be further addressed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/plb.13764 | DOI Listing |
Ground Water
September 2025
College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, South Australia, 5001, Australia.
Cross-sectional (2D) groundwater models are commonly applied to simulate complex processes that are challenging to capture using the coarse grids of 3D regional-scale models. 2D models are often extracted from 3D models for this purpose. However, translating groundwater properties from 3D to 2D models so that regional flow patterns are preserved poses several challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrovasc Res
August 2025
ARTORG Center for Biomedical Engineering Research, University of Bern, Bern, 3010, Switzerland.
Efficient oxygen delivery in the brain relies on a finely tuned balance between vascular architecture and dynamic flow regulation. While red blood cells (RBCs) passively flow through the capillary network, neurovascular coupling ensures that the blood supply adapts to meet the metabolic demands of active neurons. Pericytes, contractile cells embedded in the capillary walls, play a key role in this process by modulating capillary diameter in response to neural signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2025
School of Civil and Hydraulic Engineering, Xichang University, Xichang, China.
The Kuanyu ion-adsorption rare earth element (REE) deposit, Sichuan's first economically viable resource of its type, remains underexplored in terms of REE fractionation and enrichment mechanisms within its weathering profiles. This study systematically resolves REE speciation patterns and light-to-heavy REE (LREE/HREE) differentiation processes, advancing the metallogenic framework fo r such deposits. Analytical results demonstrate: (1) A vertically progressive enrichment of LREE-dominated REE concentrations from bedrock to topsoil, with the fully weathered layer serving as the primary enrichment zone; (2) Weathering of primary REE-bearing minerals and subsequent secondary mineral formation as drivers of elemental redistribution; (3) Contrasting controls by clay minerals, iron-manganese oxides, and humic acids-clay minerals preferentially adsorb LREEs, while iron-manganese oxides exhibit stronger HREE affinity through inner-sphere complexation, and humic acids enhance HREE mobility via stable complex formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
July 2025
Department of Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Arizona, United States of America.
Vadose zones serve as significant reservoirs of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at contaminated sites, posing risks to the groundwater underneath. Partitioning of PFAS to the solid-water and air-water interfaces in soils complicates PFAS leaching in the vadose zone. We apply mathematical models representing PFAS-specific retention and transport processes to simulate vadose-zone leaching and mass discharge at a PFAS-contaminated field site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2025
China Energy Longyuan Environmental Protection Co. LTD, Beijing, China.
The movement of overburden strata under valley geomorphological conditions presents significant challenges for ground pressure control and the protection of surface ecosystems and aquifers. In this study, geological and boundary mechanical conditions were obtained through field investigation and monitoring, and were subsequently applied in both physical similarity simulation and numerical modeling. The research focuses on two mining sequences-steep gully to deep gully (SG→DG) and deep gully to steep gully (DG→SG)-to analyze the evolution of stress and displacement in overburden strata at different mining stages.
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