Moisture retention and hydraulic conductivity for four biochar-amended soils from Oregon

Research has suggested that biochar soil amendments have the ability to improve soil water retention, but results have not been consistent or predictable across soil types. The objective of this project was to evaluate the potential for biochar soil amendments to mitigate agricultural drought by characterizing their impacts on soil hydraulics and plant growth across a range of agricultural soil conditions. This data set contains soil moisture retention curves and unsaturated hydraulic conductivities for four Oregon agricultural soils amended with biochar. Gasified biochars made from wheat straw (AgEnergy, Spokane, WA) and conifer wood (BioLogical, Philomath, OR) were tilled into soils at experimental stations in Madras (loam), Pendleton (silt loam), Aurora (sandy loam), and Klamath Falls (loamy sand). The biochars were incorporated by tillage in the fall to a depth of 12 cm at rates equating to 0, 9, 18, and 36 Mg/ha, with three replicate plots per treatment. Soil cores were collected the following spring and used to construct moisture retention curves using a combination of pressure plates, a WP4 water potentiameter instrument, and a HYPROP instrument.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
bureauCode {010:00}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier fb21c1e4-2c6c-4f99-9923-b34f64ee5823
metadata_type geospatial
modified 2018-04-17
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-124.27734375, 41.8368278607], [-116.89453125, 41.8368278607], [-116.89453125, 46.0732306254], [-124.27734375, 46.0732306254], [-124.27734375, 41.8368278607]]]}
publisher Climate Adaptation Science Centers
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 1ca23b588db8140cb6bfe9875b27fc623b8e00b3
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-124.27734375, 41.8368278607], [-116.89453125, 41.8368278607], [-116.89453125, 46.0732306254], [-124.27734375, 46.0732306254], [-124.27734375, 41.8368278607]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • geo
  • geoss
  • klamath-falls
  • madras
  • national
  • north-america
  • oregon
  • pacific-northwest
  • pendleton
  • porosity
  • soil-moisture
  • united-states
  • willamette
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer USDA-ARS FSCRU (Point of Contact)
maintainer_email kristin.trippe@ars.usda.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-22T03:29:43.229683
metadata_modified 2025-11-22T03:29:43.229688
notes Research has suggested that biochar soil amendments have the ability to improve soil water retention, but results have not been consistent or predictable across soil types. The objective of this project was to evaluate the potential for biochar soil amendments to mitigate agricultural drought by characterizing their impacts on soil hydraulics and plant growth across a range of agricultural soil conditions. This data set contains soil moisture retention curves and unsaturated hydraulic conductivities for four Oregon agricultural soils amended with biochar. Gasified biochars made from wheat straw (AgEnergy, Spokane, WA) and conifer wood (BioLogical, Philomath, OR) were tilled into soils at experimental stations in Madras (loam), Pendleton (silt loam), Aurora (sandy loam), and Klamath Falls (loamy sand). The biochars were incorporated by tillage in the fall to a depth of 12 cm at rates equating to 0, 9, 18, and 36 Mg/ha, with three replicate plots per treatment. Soil cores were collected the following spring and used to construct moisture retention curves using a combination of pressure plates, a WP4 water potentiameter instrument, and a HYPROP instrument.
num_resources 3
num_tags 16
title Moisture retention and hydraulic conductivity for four biochar-amended soils from Oregon