AGROTECHNOLOGY Meteo Drought monitor: The soils in Germany are that dry again

Drought monitor: The soils in Germany are that dry again

In some regions it is downright dry again. This is now also shown by the drought monitor from the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research (UFZ)

In some regions it is already dry again, data from the Helmholtz Institute show. That is how low the water supply in the soil is. The flood in western Germany was particularly remembered last year. Despite the rainy first half of the year, 2021 was not a wet year overall. In some regions it is downright dry again. This is now also shown by the drought monitor from the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research (UFZ)

Top soil: What is the soil moisture level in the top 25 cm?Status: 3.1.2022. Drought: dark red = extraordinary, red = extreme, orange = difficult, light orange = moderate, yellow = unusually dry. // © UFZ Drought Monitor / Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research
Too dry autumn in the west and southwest

Especially in Hesse, parts of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) and Baden-Württemberg, the water supplies in the topsoil (up to 25 cm) are unusually low for this time of the year. “The water supply that had built up since spring has already been used up,” said Roland Funke, head of the hydrology department at the State Office for Nature, Environment and Consumer Protection (Lanuv) in North Rhine-Westphalia. This is mainly due to the comparatively dry autumn. Between August and November, around 214 l of precipitation per square meter was measured in North Rhine-Westphalia . That is 25% less rain than the long-term average.

Total soil: What is the soil moisture level down to a depth of 1.8 m? Status: 3.1.2022. Drought: dark red = extraordinary, red = extreme, orange = difficult, light orange = moderate, yellow = unusually dry. // © UFZ Drought Monitor / Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research
Water supplies do not benefit from heavy rain

Particularly problematic in the past year were the local heavy rain events and the floods, which wreaked havoc in parts of North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate in particular. The local rainfall was too heavy for the soil to benefit in the long term.

“If the rain is too heavy, it does not seep away, but flows off into the water. It’s like a sponge: If the jet is too strong, the water does not penetrate. Only a less powerful water jet is absorbed,” says the expert from North Rhine-Westphalia. The total soils down to a depth of 1.8 m are not only particularly dry in North Rhine-Westphalia. In the east of Germany, too, the land reserves are generally not well filled, as the data from the drought monitor show

Usable field capacity on 3.1.2022: The nFK states what proportion of the water is available to plants. From below 30% the plant suffers from drought stress. Red = 0-10%, dark orange 10-20%, light orange 20-30%, light gray 30-40%, green 60-90%, to dark blue => 95%. // © UFZ Drought Monitor / Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research
That is how much the groundwater levels drop

There is currently enough plant-available water on the surface, as the data from the drought monitor show. But that’s common at this time of year. However, the groundwater levels are still falling. They had recovered in the meantime in the past year. In NRW, according to Lanuv, the water levels are currently too low at half of the measuring points. 

The overall development is of particular concern to forest farmers and foresters , as the trees need enough water in the deep layers after several years of drought.  The Lanuv experts fear that the water levels will not be able to recover sufficiently before summer.

Dr. Olaf Zinke, agrarheuteam Dienstag, 22.06.2021

  • Arable and grassland farmers from the south may be surprised by the fact that soils have been inaccessible for a long time, but the situation in eastern Germany is still precarious. The drought monitor at the Helmholtz Center (www.ufz.de) has been dark red there since 2018. The new soil moisture viewer from the German Weather Service also shows extreme drought stress for the entire region between the Baltic Sea and the Ore Mountains.
  • In the Hanover region, too, the sprinklers have been running everywhere on light soils for many weeks, in potatoes, rye, beets or maize. In recent years, the authorities have regularly reduced the quantities.

/meteo

Alexey Demin

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