Baseline Systems BaseStation 3200 V12 User Manual

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BaseStation 3200 Advanced Irrigation Controller Manual

To understand soil moisture based smart irrigation, you also need to understand the following

industry standard terms for soil moisture content.

Dr

ie

r

W

et

te

r

Saturation

The soil pores are filled with water and nearly all of the air in the

soil has been displaced by water. Gravity exerts force on the

water contained in saturated soils, moving it deeper into the

ground (if possible). When this “gravitational water” moves

down through the soil, it becomes unavailable to plants.

Field Capacity

The level of soil moisture left in the soil after drainage of the

gravitational water. If you irrigate to a level above field capacity,

it will result in runoff or drainage as gravitational water.

Maximum

Allowed

Depletion

(MAD)

When the soil moisture content reaches this level, irrigation

needs to start. In most cases, the maximum allowed depletion

level is well before the plants begin to show visible signs of

stress. Irrigators typically start watering at or before MAD is

reached because they do not want their landscapes to show

signs of stress.

Permanent

Wilt Point

The minimal point of soil moisture where the plants wilt and

begin to die off.

Oven Dry

When soil is dried in an oven, nearly all water is removed. This

moisture content is used to provide a reference for measuring

saturation, field capacity, and MAD.

One key point is that water applied above field capacity is generally wasted – it gravitationally

moves down through the soil and becomes unavailable to plants. Excess water will also leech

nutrients from the soil into deeper soil layers, reducing the efficiency of fertilizers and soil

treatments.

To understand field capacity, it is often useful to think of a sponge. If you dunk a sponge in a bucket

of water and pull it out, water will gravimetrically drain from the sponge for a period of time. When

the dripping stops, the sponge will still be very wet. This moisture level is roughly equivalent to

field capacity in soils – water is no longer draining into lower soil layers and is held in the root zone

of the plants.

When your irrigation system maintains soil moisture content between field capacity and maximum

allowed depletion, you will find that your plants are healthier and your water use actually

decreases. Studies also show that appropriately varying the time between irrigation events in order

to allow the soil to dry to the chosen depletion point promotes deeper root growth and

subsequently more efficiency and drought tolerance from the plants.

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