Effects of different biomass materials as a salt-isolation layer on water and salt migration in coastal saline soil

PeerJ. 2021 Jul 7:9:e11766. doi: 10.7717/peerj.11766. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to find a material suited for the prevention of evaporative water loss and salt accumulation in coastal saline soils. One-dimensional vertical water infiltration and phreatic evaporation experiments were conducted using a silty loam saline soil. A 3-cm-thick layer of corn straw, biochar, and peat was buried at the soil depth of 20 cm, and a 6-cm-thick layer of peat was also buried at the same soil depth for comparison. The presence of the biochar layer increased the upper soil water content, but its ability to inhibit salt accumulation was poor, leading to a high salt concentration in the surface soil. The 3-cm-thick straw and 6-cm-thick peat layers were most effective to inhibit salt accumulation, which reduced the upper soil salt concentration by 96% and 93%, respectively. However, the straw layer strongly inhibited phreatic evaporation and resulted in low water content in the upper soil layer. Compared with the straw layer, the peat layer increased the upper soil water content. Thus, burying a 6-cm-thick peat layer in the coastal saline soil is the optimal strategy to retain water in the upper soil layer and intercept salt in the deeper soil layer.

Keywords: Infiltration rate; Phreatic evaporation; Salt distribution; Salt-isolation; Water migration.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China: 41977087, 41771256, the Outstanding Youth Innovation Team in Shandong Province, China: 2020KJF006, and the Major Applied Agricultural Technology Innovation Project in Shandong Province, China: SD2019ZZ017. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.