DOI: 10.3390/su18136463 ISSN: 2071-1050

Response of Soil and Vegetation in a Typical Surface Water-Groundwater Interaction Zones

Tianchao Liu, Tong Li, Yi Zhang, Yanyan Ge, Feilong Jie, Sheng Li

Surface water-groundwater interaction zones are critical ecohydrological interfaces in arid regions, yet quantitative spatiotemporal patterns and soil-vegetation responses under coupled water-salt-heat gradients remain poorly documented. Based on a one-year monitoring period (August 2024–August 2025) at four sites along a river-to-desert transect (LW3: 25 m, LW2: 200 m, LW1: 300 m, LW4: 400 m from the Niya River) in the hyper-arid Tarim Basin, this study reveals the following quantitative patterns. Groundwater depth increased with distance from the river and followed an annual decrease-increase trend, with an anomalous shallow peak in March 2025 (−20 cm) linked to precipitation recharge. Soil temperature stability increased with depth: the 20 cm layer recorded the widest annual fluctuation (e.g., −1.5 °C to 24 °C at LW1), whereas the 80 cm layer varied only between approximately −0.2 °C and 28 °C. Proximity to the river dampened thermal extremes. Shallow soil moisture was highly dynamic (with a coefficient of variation [CV] reaching 40–50% at LW1 and LW4), while deeper layers remained stable; LW3 near the river stayed saturated year-round (CV = 0). Soil electrical conductivity (EC) decreased with distance from the river: LW3 exhibited the highest surface values (5000–16,000 μS cm−1), whereas LW1 recorded the lowest (1000–2700 μS cm−1). Vegetation performance was governed by coupled water-salt conditions rather than moisture alone: P. australis at LW1 achieved the tallest growth (>200 cm) and highest photosynthetic rates (20.25–37.38 μmol m−2 s−1), outperforming LW3 (104 cm, winter photosynthesis dropping to 2.01) and LW4 (~100 cm). Correlation analysis further showed strong vertical temperature coupling (r > 0.96 across all depths) and depth-stratified water-salt relationships (e.g., EC-volumetric water content r = 0.95 at 20 cm in LW4), reflecting spatial differentiation driven by freeze-thaw cycles, evaporative enrichment, and homogeneous silt-textured soils (54–96% fine fraction). These quantitative findings provide a detailed observational baseline for riparian ecohydrology in hyper-arid inland rivers and underscore that sustainable vegetation management requires balancing water availability against salinity stress.

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