Soil bioturbation by earthworms and plant roots: mechanical and energetic consideration for plastic deformation
Soil bioturbation by earthworms and plant roots: mechanical and energetic consideration for plastic deformation
Soil structure is a key factor shaping hydrological and ecological functions including water storage, deep recharge and plant growth. Compaction adversely impacts soil ecosystem services over extended periods (years to decades) until structure and functionality are restored. An important class of soil structural restoration processes are related to biomechanical activity associated with borrowing of earthworms and root proliferation in impacted soils. This study employs a new biomechanical model to estimate stresses required for earthworm and plant root bioturbation under different conditions and the mechanical energy required. We consider steady state plastic cavity expansion to determine burrowing pressures of earthworms and plant roots as linked with models for cone penetration required for initial burrowing into soil volumes. We use earthworm physical and ecological parameters (e.g., population density, burrowing rate, and burrowing behavior) to convert mechanical deformation to estimation of energy and soil organic carbon (energy source for earthworms). Results illustrate a reduction in strain energy with increasing water content and trade-offs between pressure and energy investment for various root and earthworm geometries and soil hydration. The study provides a quantitative framework for estimating energy costs of bioturbation in terms of soil organic carbon or plant assimilates and delineates mechanical and hydration conditions that promote or constrain such activities.
H31D-0654
Ruiz, Siul Aljadi
d79b3b82-7c0d-47cc-9616-11d29e6a41bd
Or, Dani
a0259fc3-35b3-4d5d-9540-867daf06473a
Schymanski, Stanislaus J.
88be1c59-47d9-4c2d-922b-bfe0939901ec
2014
Ruiz, Siul Aljadi
d79b3b82-7c0d-47cc-9616-11d29e6a41bd
Or, Dani
a0259fc3-35b3-4d5d-9540-867daf06473a
Schymanski, Stanislaus J.
88be1c59-47d9-4c2d-922b-bfe0939901ec
Ruiz, Siul Aljadi, Or, Dani and Schymanski, Stanislaus J.
(2014)
Soil bioturbation by earthworms and plant roots: mechanical and energetic consideration for plastic deformation.
American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2014, , San Francisco, United States.
15 - 19 Dec 2014.
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Poster)
Abstract
Soil structure is a key factor shaping hydrological and ecological functions including water storage, deep recharge and plant growth. Compaction adversely impacts soil ecosystem services over extended periods (years to decades) until structure and functionality are restored. An important class of soil structural restoration processes are related to biomechanical activity associated with borrowing of earthworms and root proliferation in impacted soils. This study employs a new biomechanical model to estimate stresses required for earthworm and plant root bioturbation under different conditions and the mechanical energy required. We consider steady state plastic cavity expansion to determine burrowing pressures of earthworms and plant roots as linked with models for cone penetration required for initial burrowing into soil volumes. We use earthworm physical and ecological parameters (e.g., population density, burrowing rate, and burrowing behavior) to convert mechanical deformation to estimation of energy and soil organic carbon (energy source for earthworms). Results illustrate a reduction in strain energy with increasing water content and trade-offs between pressure and energy investment for various root and earthworm geometries and soil hydration. The study provides a quantitative framework for estimating energy costs of bioturbation in terms of soil organic carbon or plant assimilates and delineates mechanical and hydration conditions that promote or constrain such activities.
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Published date: 2014
Venue - Dates:
American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2014, , San Francisco, United States, 2014-12-15 - 2014-12-19
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 469400
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469400
PURE UUID: 9b8421a0-ba39-45ea-b20d-7bf95c1dd14f
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Date deposited: 14 Sep 2022 16:43
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 18:00
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Contributors
Author:
Dani Or
Author:
Stanislaus J. Schymanski
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