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Soil Vapor Transport Improves Soil Moisture Simulations in Drylands

Soil moisture is a key variable in the Earth system, influencing evapotranspiration, surface energy exchange, vegetation activity, and climate feedbacks. Yet in arid and semi-arid regions, land-surface models often struggle to realistically represent soil drying. A common issue is that shallow soils are simulated as wetter than observed, which can affect the representation of drought and land–atmosphere interactions.

To address this problem, researchers from the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, introduced a simplified soil vapor transport scheme into the Community Land Model version 5 (CLM5). The study was recently published in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters.

The research targets a long-recognized limitation in conventional land-surface models. Under extremely dry surface conditions, upward liquid water movement becomes very weak or nearly ceases. As a result, near-surface soil layers may dry too slowly in models, leading to unrealistic wet biases.

The revised model incorporates an additional pathway: the movement of water vapor through soil pores. Even when liquid transport is strongly suppressed, moisture can still move upward in vapor form. By representing this process, the model produces more realistic drying in near-surface soil layers.

“When the surface soil becomes very dry, liquid water pathways can nearly shut down, but moisture does not stop moving altogether. Water vapor can still move through soil pores, and this often overlooked process has important effects on dryland soil moisture simulations,” says Dr. Xia Zhang, corresponding author of the study.

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Jim Smalley: The Voice That Defined Saskatchewan Agriculture Journalism | CKRM 100th Anniversary

Video: Jim Smalley: The Voice That Defined Saskatchewan Agriculture Journalism | CKRM 100th Anniversary

Our next 620 CKRM Icon is Jim Smalley. Jim reflects on his remarkable career, from his early days in Ontario and his first steps into news, to his move west and his lasting impact on Saskatchewan’s airwaves.

After joining CKRM in 1982, Jim spent more than four decades as one of the province’s most trusted and recognizable voices. Jim defined agricultural journalism — not just in Saskatchewan, but across Canada. His commitment to telling the stories of farmers, rural communities, and the people behind the headlines set the standard. Now retired from the newsroom that proudly bears his name, Jim shares memorable stories from his time on air. A broadcaster, a storyteller, and a true voice of Saskatchewan — Jim Smalley’s legacy continues to resonate at CKRM and beyond.