RESEARCH METHODS IN" STUDY OF FOREST ENVIRONMENT. 139 



capillary tensions are set up, and these do not react in the same way 

 on relatively large and very small quantities of water in the soil. 

 It appears, therefore, as suggested by Free (121), that the effective 

 procedure is the employment of a variable force, sufficient in the 

 case of any particular soil to extract all of the water which is extract- 

 able. It seems probable that this quantity would correspond to all of 

 the liquid water capable of moving from one part of the soil to 

 another. The remaining water would probably correspond closely 

 to the "unfree water" of Bouyoucos (106) and what in this bul- 

 letin is termed " water vapor," or water whose molecules are too 

 rigidly held by solid substances to have the motility of liquid mole- 

 cules. While this method is as yet untried and would obviously be 

 more laborious than the present standardized procedure, possibly pre- 

 senting new mechanical difficulties, it promises so much as a direct 

 and rapid means of determining a physical constant that it deserves 

 serious investigation. In the meantime the 1,000-gravity test should 

 be employed as the basis for comparing the moisture conditions of 

 various soils and in the detailed study of their wilting coefficients. 



10. Once the wilting coefficient of a soil has been determined, di- 

 rectly or indirectly, the current moisture condition may be expressed 

 in terms of the percentage of available moisture or the available 

 moisture per unit of soil volume, by subtracting the nonavailable 

 moisture from the whole. The amount of water per unit of volume 

 recommends itself particularly in comparing the conditions of open 

 and dense forest stands, provided that the root extent of the indi- 

 vidual tree has been investigated. Without such information, very 

 wrong conceptions of the moisture supplies available to. the indi- 

 vidual trees in different forest types are likely to be formed. 



11. For the purpose of expressing the condition with which any 

 individual plant is coping, particularly the conditions against which 

 a seedling must struggle in times of drought, it is very desirable to 

 reduce the water content of the soil to terms of availability. If it 

 is assumed that the wilting coefficient stands for a definite osmotic 

 pressure in the soil, with which the osmotic pressure in the plant 

 is in equilibrium (this, of course, being only approximately true, as 

 pointed out in paragraph 6, and being further subject to the condi- 

 tion- of the plant, as indicated in the following paragraph), then, 

 when the moisture content is equal to the wilting coefficient, the 

 availability of the soil water is 0. 



When the moi-t ure content of the, soil is twice as great as the wilt- 

 ing coefficient, aboul twice the osmotic pressure may be expected in 

 the plant as in the soil, and this should make possible a fairly definite 

 pate of absorption by tin* plant. The availability at Ibis point may 

 be called 0.50. Similarly, when the moisture content is three limes 

 the wilting coefficient, the availability may be expressed as 0.67. It 



