Wasserhaltevermögens
Wasserhaltevermögen describes the ability of a material to retain water against gravity. In soil science, it denotes the amount of water that a soil can hold in its pore spaces at given matric potentials, typically described by the soil moisture retention curve measured in the lab. The plant-available portion is often defined as the water held between field capacity (the moisture content after drainage by gravity) and the wilting point (the moisture content at which plants can no longer extract water). The difference between these two values is called the available water capacity.
Factors: soil texture and structure are primary controls: finer textures (clay, silt) and well-aggregated structure increase
Measurement: common methods include gravimetric or volumetric determination of moisture content at specific matric potentials using
Applications and significance: high Wasserhaltevermögen supports drought tolerance, determines irrigation needs, influences soil microbiology and nutrient
See also: field capacity, wilting point, available water capacity, soil porosity.