Full TGIF Record # 101811
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Web URL(s):http://www.actahort.org/books/661/661_11.htm
    Last checked: 04/2005
    Access conditions: Item is within limited access website
Publication Type:
i
Report
Author(s):Dekker, Louis W.; Ritsema, Coen J.; Oostindie, Klass
Author Affiliation:Alterra, Netherlands
Title:Dry spots in golf courses: Occurrence, amelioration and prevention
Meeting Info.:Proceedings of the First International Conference on Turfgrass Management and Science for Sports Fields, Athens, Greece, June 2-7, 2003
Source:Acta Horticulturae. Vol. 661, November 2004, p. 99-104.
Publishing Information:The Hague: International Society for Horticultural Science
# of Pages:6
Keywords:TIC Keywords: Localized dry spots; Infiltration rate; Hydrophobic soils; Water repellency; Soil moisture; Soil water content; Surfactants; Volumetric water content; Preferential flow; Time domain reflectometry
Abstract/Contents:"Although soils are generally considered to wet readily, numerous sandy soils are actually water repellent at the surface and in the rhizosphere during dry periods. The failure to absorb water has been observed under a range of vegetation types, including grass. As soils dry, hydrophobic compounds polymerize and water repellency increases. Once a critical moisture content is reached, soils shift from wettable to non-wettable, impacting infiltration and unsaturated flow, in affected soils, and consequently water use efficiency and turf quality. Localized dry spot (LDS) caused by water repellent soil continues to be a problem for many golf course superintendents. We investigated this common soil condition in the greens and fairways of Dutch golf courses. Spatial variability in degree of water repellency and soil water content were studied in vertical transects by intensive sampling. Dry spots exhibited extreme water repellency (water drops remaining for more than six hours on the surface of soil samples) to a depth of more than 200 mm. Treatments with surfactants reduced water repellency in the surface layer, decreased critical soil moisture content, improved temporal infiltration rate of applied irrigation water, and increased the volumetric water content in the rootzone. To prevent soil water repellency the soil profiles have to be kept above the critical soil moisture content by regular irrigations."
ISBN:90 6605 306 2
Language:English
References:16
Note:Graphs
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete):
Dekker, L. W., C. J. Ritsema, and K. Oostindie. 2004. Dry spots in golf courses: Occurrence, amelioration and prevention. Acta Horticulturae. 661:p. 99-104.
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Web URL(s):
http://www.actahort.org/books/661/661_11.htm
    Last checked: 04/2005
    Access conditions: Item is within limited access website
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MSU catalog number: SB 13 .A25 no. 661
MSU catalog number: SB 433 .I55 2003
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