Some types of lysimeters include: •
Weighing Lysimeters • Principle: Measures changes in the weight of the lysimeter to determine water balance • Operation: The lysimeter is placed on a scale and changes in weight are recorded over time, allowing for the calculation of
evaporation,
transpiration, and drainage •
Suction Lysimeters • Principle: Used negative pressure (suction) to extract soil water for analysis • Operation: A
porous cup is buried in the soil and a vacuum is applied to extract water from the surrounding soil; collected water can be analyzed for nutrients, contaminants, or other parameters •
Drainage Lysimeters • Principle: Collects water that drains through the soil profile • Operation: These lysimeters have a collection system to capture water that moved through the soil; collected water is analyzed to study leaching and nutrient transport • Field Lysimeters • Principle: Installed directly in the field to simulate natural soil-plant interaction • Operation: The system mimics natural conditions, allowing researchers to study the impact of various factors on soil water movement,
nutrient cycling, and plant growth; field lysimeters can be installed with weighted systems to determine water balance •
Greenhouse Lysimeters • Principle: Similar to field lysimeters but installed in controlled greenhouse environments • Operation: A controlled setting is provided to studying soil-water interactions, allowing researchers to manipulate environmental conditions and monitor plan responses • Zero Tension Lysimeters • Principle: Measured drainage under zero tension conditions • Operation: The system is designed to collect water from the soil without the application of suction, allowing researchers to study natural drainage patterns •
Capillary Lysimeters • Principle: Utilizes
capillary action to collect soil water • Operation: Capillary forces draw water into the lysimeter; this type of lysimeter is often used to study water movement in the vadose zone (above the water table) • Pressure plate lysimeters • Principle: Measured soil water retention characteristics • Operation: Pressure is applied to the soil to extract water at different tension settings, this helps to determine the soil's ability to retain water The list above is not comprehensive; there are many types of lysimeters and many ways that lysimetry can be used to understand soil-
porewater relationships. ==General usage==