Subcritical water repellency is a poorly acknowledged physical property of
soil. It refers to soil where water uptake appears to occur readily, get is
impeded to some extent by the presence of hydrophobic surface films. It wa
s only after the recent development of a sensitive testing technique that s
ubcritical water repellency was shown to be a common feature of many soils.
It is a fundamental physical property of soil and has implications for the
resistance of soil structure against disruption by wetting, bypass now, an
d surface runoff Using a technique adapted by Hallett and Young (1999), we
assessed a water repellency index, R, of individual soil aggregates from a
range of cultivation practices with different fertilizer inputs and depths.
The parameter R is extremely powerful since it is directly proportional to
the decrease in water sorptivity caused by repellency. The hypotheses test
ed are (i) that soil disturbance reduces R and (ii) that high levels of pla
nt nutrients (fertilizer) will enhance R, Cultivation was found to cause a
twofold decrease in R for all soils tested except one pasture treatment. Pa
sture soil from another site had an R value that was three times higher to
a depth of 60 cm than an adjacent plowed soil. Soil aggregates were more re
pellent from no-till than plowed treatments. Higher levels of N added to fi
eld soil did not affect R.