Diurnal Monitoring of Moisture Content of Scots Pine and Small-Leaved Lime Trunks Using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) and Increment Cores

Ground penetrating radar is non-invasive technology suitable for mapping moisture content variations since it shows high sensitivity to changes in water saturation. In this work we used a GPR tomography approach to estimate moisture content within two small-leaved lime (Tilia cordata) and two Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) trunks. Additional information was derived using the method of GPR zero-offset. GPR data was collected in Moscow (diurnal monitoring in September 2021) using a shielded GPR antenna working at 1500 MHz. Moisture values derived from GPR data were compared with the values obtained directly by measuring sampled wood cores gravimetrically. A good agreement was observed between GPR-derived moisture content and core sample-derived values. Notwithstanding GPR-derived moisture content is about two times higher than core sample-derived values, a strong linear relation with a determination coefficient more than 0.8 is observed. Diurnal monitoring did not reveal any significant changes in moisture content inside the trunks. It can be concluded that the period of early autumn in the Moscow region is characterized by a constant moisture content of the small-leaved lime trunk during the day. © 2023 by the authors.

Authors
Sudakova M. , Terentieva E. , Kalashnikov A. , Seregin I. , Yaroslavtsev A.
Journal
Publisher
MDPI AG
Issue number
2
Language
English
State
Published
Number
406
Volume
14
Year
2023
Organizations
  • 1 Geology Faculty, Seismic Department, MSU Lomonosov, GSP-1, 1 Leninskiye Gory, Moscow, 119991, Russian Federation
  • 2 Earth Cryosphere Institute, Tyumen Scientific Centre SB RAS, Maligyna 86, Tyumen, 625000, Russian Federation
  • 3 Department of Landscape Design and Sustainable Ecosystems, Agrarian-Technological Institute, Moscow State University of Civil Engineering, 26, Yaroslavskoye Shosse, Moscow, 129337, Russian Federation
  • 4 Department of Ecology, Russian State Agrarian University-Moscow Timiryazev Agricultural Academy, Timiryazevskaya St., 49, Moscow, 127550, Russian Federation
  • 5 Agrarian and Technological Institute, Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia, Miklukho-Maklaya Str., 6, Moscow, 117198, Russian Federation
Keywords
non-destructive testing; tree stability; trees monitoring; wood decay; wood moisture content
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