PSY-1 Stem Psychrometers are ideally suited to use in cotton. The large lignified stem provides long straight
round internodes for ease of installation and does not exude sap or extracts from the xylem into the Stem
Psychrometer chamber. The results clearly show a perfect diurnal response to the daily water use and
rehydration that the plant experiences. The PSY-1 can be used for extended periods throughout the growing
season to generate a valuable history of management information.
An international team of scientists working at the University of New England has been
experimenting with technologies that can help to monitor the health of the environment
by measuring the level of “stress” in trees.
Professor Kathy Steppe and Dr Dirk De Pauw travelled from Belgium to spend a month in
Armidale working with UNE plant ecophysiologist Dr Nigel Warwick and Alec Downey from
ICT International, an Armidale-based company making - and distributing world-wide -
equipment for plant, soil, and environmental monitoring. Professor Steppe comes from
the Laboratory of Plant Ecology at Ghent University, and Dr De Pauw is Chief Executive
Officer of Phyto-IT, Belgium - a company that specialises in the analysis of data from -
and the mathematical modelling of - plant systems.
More Details
They have been conducting experiments to compare the performance of three technologies
that all use a pulse of heat injected into a tree trunk to measure how fast the sap is
travelling up the trunk. As the heat pulse travels with the sap, sensors in the trunk
measure its progress. The rate of flow is a sensitive indicator of the degree of environmental stress.
“Our original sap flow measurements were done on European trees in the Northern Hemisphere,”
said Professor Steppe, “and in coming to Armidale we’ve had a chance to measure sap flow in
eucalypts and acacias.” The research visit of Professor Steppe was funded by a grant from the
National Fund for Scientific Research, Belgium (FWO).
“Our job here is to compare three different ways of measuring the movement of the heat pulse,
and to assess the accuracy of the sensors and the effectiveness of these systems in measuring
stress in trees,” said Dr De Pauw, who designs software for analysing the data recorded by the
heat-pulse instruments.
In the experiments at UNE the scientists were able to control and vary the rate at which water
flowed through sections of tree trunk, and see how accurately the three different measurement
systems recorded these varying rates of flow. Dr Warwick pointed out that, after the development
of semiconductor technology in the 1990s, accurate measurements were now possible. “But we still
don’t know the biology,” he said, “- for example, how wood behaves when it’s heated. Now that we
have accurate instruments we can start asking some really interesting questions.”
Mr Downey, who is the Manager of Plant Science Applications and Research at ICT International,
said that his Armidale-based company exported monitoring equipment to countries on all continents.
“The company’s owned and operated by scientists for scientists,” he said.
He explained the role of equipment such as heat-pulse sensors in the large-scale modelling of
environmental phenomena such as carbon sequestration. “The more water that flows through a tree,
the more carbon it can store,” he said.
Dr Warwick said that UNE’s collaboration with Northern-Hemisphere scientists and an Armidale-based
company that supplied monitoring equipment to the world gave the current experiments a uniquely
global perspective.
Phoebe Barnes
(pbarnes@une.edu.au)
PhD Candidate, Agronomy and Soil Science, School of Environmental & Rural Science, UNE, Australia
Scattered paddock trees are a common sight across many areas of the grazing landscape
and offer a valuable natural resource both above- and below-ground.
It has been estimated, however, that within 40 to 185 years these trees could be lost from the Australian landscape.
A PhD project has been developed to understand the roles these scattered trees play in grazing environments.
A Decagon Weather Station
is being used to monitor sunlight, rainfall, temperature, humidity and soil moisture in this project..
Download article
View web page (UNE website)
What could a Shire do if they have too little fresh water, too much saline ground water, and need to create a beautiful looking Shire with great lawns and the lot?
Mr Ghazi Abu Rumman researching the use of salt-tolerant halophytic grasses as turf.
Lamb mortality is a substantial problem for wool producers. Mortality is highest in periods of bad weather,
such as severe cold snaps. It is unclear whether mortality is exacerbated by sheep behaviour, specifically if and how
they access shelter during bad weather. Using GPS tracking collars and high-precision weather monitoring,
shelter utilisation in bad weather can be measured. From this, alternative shelter designs and methods for attracting
sheep to shelter may be developed, reducing lamb mortality.
Applications Image Gallery Click the image thumbnail for full size
Two stations high up on the mountain side and the third down on the lower part of the property not far from
the road frontage. The third station is 1 kilometre from Logrunners where we do the download and is
not direct line of sight. The connections appear to be independent of the weather.
In December 2008 an in-situ experiment was established at Casey Station using material from
Thala Valley landfill mixed with different ratios of triple superphosphate and phosphate rock.
The experiment was monitored and sampled during December 2008, January 2009 and January 2010,
having undergone over a year of natural freeze-thaw cycling at Casey Station.
Download article
Overview of Applications for the Smart Logger System
Applications Image Gallery Click the image thumbnail for full size
Monitoring System Case Studies
Studying Water Dynamics In Bauxite-Processing Residue
Understanding water dynamics in the soil-plantatmosphere system is critical to Alcoa's rehabilitation program. Field instrumentation is providing this
information for process-identification and modelling.