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March 13, 2025

High-frequency monitoring reveals complex infiltration-preferential flow processes in karst hillslopes

Monitoring plot and meteorological station in the catchment (a), planar photographs of the monitoring plots (b), burial depth of the soil moisture probe (c), excavated profile of the ditches (d) and (e), and arrangement of the soil moisture probes (Δ) in the two plots and the spatial distribution of the soil thickness (f) and (g). Credit: Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2024GL112674
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Monitoring plot and meteorological station in the catchment (a), planar photographs of the monitoring plots (b), burial depth of the soil moisture probe (c), excavated profile of the ditches (d) and (e), and arrangement of the soil moisture probes (Δ) in the two plots and the spatial distribution of the soil thickness (f) and (g). Credit: Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2024GL112674

A study led by Prof. Chen Hongsong from the Institute of Subtropical Agriculture of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has unveiled the mechanistic influence of soil thickness (as a representative litho-structural factor) on water movement dynamics.

Their findings are published in the and .

Karst landforms, which are shaped by the dissolution of carbonate rocks, cover about 15% of the Earth's land surface and provide stable water resources to a quarter of the global population. Southwestern China contains the largest exposed area globally, where intense dissolution processes have created a distinct surface-underground dual three-dimensional hydrological structure.

This unique system exhibits rapid soil water , prominent preferential development, and extreme spatial heterogeneity in hydrological patterns. Under climate change, the dual attributes of rapid infiltration and weak water retention amplify risks of karst drought and flooding in these regions.

Based at the Huanjiang Karst Ecosystem Observation and Research Station of CAS, the researchers conducted a detailed study on hillslope plots using integrated 3D monitoring systems for surface-subsurface hydrology. Through long-term, high-density, and high-frequency (5-minute interval) soil moisture observations, time-series analysis was employed to quantify rainfall response characteristics of both conventional matrix infiltration and preferential flow in slope soils.

Soil moisture response timing (Tp2p) across hillslopes, the DSP (a) and SSP (b) along with rainfall events (blue bars) over the monitoring period. Credit: Zhang Jun
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Soil moisture response timing (Tp2p) across hillslopes, the DSP (a) and SSP (b) along with rainfall events (blue bars) over the monitoring period. Credit: Zhang Jun

The results revealed that rainfall penetrates the soil more rapidly in karst areas, with soil moisture wetting front velocities (1,373 mm/h) significantly exceeding those in non-karst regions (17–610 mm/h). Soil moisture response time and wetting front velocity were found to increase from upslope to downslope and from surface to deeper soil layers.

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The study also highlighted the increased variability of infiltration parameters in slopes with thinner soil layers, attributed to the reduced regulation of the hydraulic gradient. Rainfall intensity and amount had a greater impact on infiltration (30.9–63.9%) compared to antecedent soil moisture (12.7–26.1%).

Additionally, increased soil thickness may diminish the topographic and rainfall controls on infiltration processes. These findings underscore the critical role of high-resolution monitoring in characterizing spatial heterogeneity of infiltration and quantitatively defining the rapidity of hydrological processes in karst hillslopes.

Linear relationship between the surface elevation and soil thickness with the preferential flow frequency on the DSH (a) and (c) and SSH (b) and (d). Credit: Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2024GL112674
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Linear relationship between the surface elevation and soil thickness with the preferential flow frequency on the DSH (a) and (c) and SSH (b) and (d). Credit: Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2024GL112674

The researchers also identified two key types of preferential flow: macropore flow and lateral flow at the soil-bedrock interface. They found that macropore flow dominates in karst hillslopes (more than 63%), while interface lateral flow, triggered by short-duration intense rainfall, plays a critical role as well. Interestingly, preferential flow occurrence was more frequent in downslope areas than upslope, due to the spatial variation in soil hydraulic properties.

In slopes with thicker soil, a negative correlation was observed between soil depth and preferential flow frequency, whereas no such correlation existed in shallow-soil-covered slopes, where rainfall intensity and antecedent moisture played a more significant role.

These findings highlight the influence of spatial heterogeneity in soil thickness on preferential flow characteristics, further enriching the complex infiltration-runoff theory in karst hillslopes.

"Existing research has extensively explored fundamental characteristics, types, and pathways of soil water infiltration," said Dr. Zhang Jun, a postdoctoral fellow. "Our new findings will advance the understanding of rainfall-infiltration-runoff mechanisms in karst systems and provide more valuable water resource management strategies in response to climate variability."

More information: Jun Zhang et al, Characterizing rapid infiltration processes on complex hillslopes: Insights from soil moisture response to rainfall events, Journal of Hydrology (2024).

Jun Zhang et al, Regulation of Preferential Flow by Soil Thickness on Small Hillslopes With Complex Topography Through Intensive High‐Frequency Soil Moisture Monitoring, Geophysical Research Letters (2025).

Journal information: Geophysical Research Letters

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High-frequency monitoring in karst hillslopes reveals that soil thickness significantly influences water movement dynamics. Rapid soil water infiltration and preferential flow are prominent, with wetting front velocities in karst areas reaching 1,373 mm/h, much higher than in non-karst regions. Rainfall intensity and soil thickness impact infiltration processes, with macropore and lateral flows being key preferential flow types. These findings enhance understanding of hydrological processes in karst systems.

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