Course Content
Concept, scope and importance of soil physics in agriculture
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Surface sealing, its effect on soil and crop growth and its management
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Soil moisture and temperature regimes
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The FAO-UNESCO soil classification system
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Concept and development of land capability classification
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Learn Soil Physics, Genesis and Classification with Rahul

Osmotic Potential (yo)

  • Osmotic potential (Ψₒ) results from dissolved solutes (salts, organic compounds) in soil water.
  • Negative Value: Ψₒ is always negative because solutes reduce water’s free energy and restrict movement.
  • Solute Concentration Effect: Higher solute concentration = lower (more negative) Ψₒ.
  • Water Movement: Water moves from low solute concentration (less negative Ψₒ) to high solute concentration (more negative Ψₒ).
  • Limited Role in Bulk Soil Flow: Since soils lack semi-permeable membranes, Ψₒ has minimal direct impact on mass water movement.
  • Plant Water Uptake: Critical for roots—semi-permeable membranes allow osmosis; high salinity (very negative Ψₒ) makes water uptake harder.
  • Vapor Pressure Impact: Solutes reduce soil water’s vapor pressure, slowing evaporation.
  • Salinity Stress: Excess salts lower Ψₒ, causing “physiological drought” (water exists but plants can’t absorb it easily).
  • Irrigation Concerns: Saline irrigation water increases osmotic stress, requiring management like leaching or salt-tolerant crops.
  • Total Soil Water Potential: Ψₒ combines with matric (Ψₘ) and gravitational (Ψ₉) potentials to determine overall water movement (Ψₜ = Ψₘ + Ψₒ + Ψ₉).
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