Salinity Monitoring and Modelling at Different Scales
A special issue of Land (ISSN 2073-445X). This special issue belongs to the section "Land, Soil and Water".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2024) | Viewed by 19285
Special Issue Editors
Interests: hydraulic properties; soil water dynamics; soil salinity; pedotransfer functions
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: hydrogeophysics; environmental geophysics; geophysical monitoring; vadose zone; soil salinity
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: modeling soil water dynamics and solute transport in the vadose zone
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Under the current changing climate and agricultural intensification, agricultural management practices need to adapt to changing conditions and to increasing water scarcity issues. Soil salinization, which already widely affects many regions of the world with arid and semiarid climates, becomes a top priority of research as it not only leads to the degradation of soil functions but also to yield losses, farmer's income, eventual migration of populations, and ultimately social unrest.
Strategies to better tackle soil salinization problems are thus critical for supporting soil management and agricultural production. These strategies should be based on efficient monitoring programs capable of continuously evaluating the performance of the implemented management strategies.
Numerical modeling, as well as remote sensing, are two widely used examples that have served as the basis for the development of monitoring tools aimed at supporting soil management and mitigating soil salinization problems. Numerical modeling, either through simple water balance models or more complex transient-state, Richards-based models, is fundamental for data integration and processes interpretation to improve agricultural practices and the protection of soil resources. Non-invasive and inexpensive proximal and remote sensing data can also be used to rapidly monitor, model, and predict the spatial and temporal variations of soil physical, chemical and hydrological properties at different scales.
In this Special Issue, we are soliciting research or manuscripts advancing on soil salinity measurement, modeling of soil salinization processes through the use of numerical tools at different scales, modeling and mapping using proximal soil sensing and remote sensing sensors, and other upscaling procedures used for soil salinity assessment and management. This Special Issue aims to bring together researchers from around the world on the advances in soil salinity measurement, mapping and modeling using various proximal and remote sensing sensors and vadose zone modeling to help connect researchers working in a similar area to tackle the globally critical issue and enhance soil security.
Dr. Maria da Conceição Gonçalves
Dr. Mohammad Farzamian
Dr. Tiago Brito Ramos
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- soil salinity
- soil hydraulic properties
- pedotransfer functions
- proximal soil sensing
- remote sensing
- electromagnetic induction
- digital soil mapping
- machine learning
- arid and semi-arid climate
- agricultural water management
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