Short-term changes in soil pore size distribution : Impact of land use
Changes in land use affect the pore size distribution (PSD) of the soil, and hence important soil functions such as gas exchange, water availability and plant growth. The objective of this study was to investigate potentially damaging and restorative soil management practices on soil pore structure. We quantified the rate of change in PSD six years after changes in land use taking advantage of the Highfield land-use change experiment at Rothamsted Research. This experiment includes short-term soil degradation and restoration scenarios established simultaneously within long-term contrasting treatments that had reached steady-state equilibrium. The land-use change scenarios comprised conversion to grassland of previously arable or bare fallow soil, and conversion of grassland to arable and bare fallow soils. In the laboratory, we exposed intact soil cores (100 cm3) to matric potentials ranging from −10 hPa to -1.5 MPa. Based on equivalent soil mass, the plant available water capacity decreased after conversion from grassland, whereas no change was observed after conversion to grassland. Structural void ratio decreased after termination of grassland and introduction of grassland in bare fallow soil, while no change was seen when changing arable to grassland. Consequently, it was faster to degrade than to restore a complex soil structure. The study illustrates that introducing grassland in degraded soil may result in short term increase in soil density.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Additional information | The study was supported by the Green Development and Demonstration Programme (GUDP) of the Ministry of Environment and Food of Denmark through the “Cover crops for optimization of cereal based cropping systems” (Grant No. 3405-11-0225) and “Optimized soil tillage in cereal based cropping systems” (Grant No. 34009-12-0502) projects, and by the EU 7th Research Framework Programme, Distributed Infrastructure for Experimentation in Ecosystem Research (ExpeER) through the project “Identification of soil organic carbon thresholds for sustained soil functions in agroecosystems” (Grant No. 262060). This experiment is supported by: the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) Soils to Nutrition Institute Strategic Program (BBS/E/C/000I0310), the Rothamsted Long-term Experiments National Capability (BBS/E/C00J0300) and the Lawes Agricultural Trust |
| Keywords | Land-use change, Pore size distribution, Soil degradation and recovery |
| Project | S2N - Soil to Nutrition - Work package 1 (WP1) - Optimising nutrient flows and pools in the soil-plant-biota system, The Rothamsted Long Term Experiments [2017-2022] |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:17 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:22 |


