**Bottom line – for the loamy and silty‑loam soils that dominate much of South Korea, a 22 % volumetric water content (VWC) is still safe but already past the “refill” line for a Tulip Tree (Liriodendron tulipifera). It means roughly half of the plant‑available water in the root zone has been used, so you should irrigate soon—especially if hot, windy, or before the summer monsoon stalls. In sandier ground 22 % can be close to field‑capacity (almost too wet); in heavier clays it is approaching mild drought stress. Use 22 % VWC as a decision trigger rather than a crisis indicator: water enough to lift the profile back toward 28‑30 % and avoid letting it drop below ≈18 %.
| Soil texture | Typical field‑capacity VWC | Typical permanent‑wilting VWC | “Readily‑available” band (≈50 % depletion) | How 22 % compares |
|---|
| Sandy loam | 20–25 % citeturn5search0turn5search5 | 7–10 % citeturn5search0 | 14–17 % | Near the wet end (can still drain) |
| Loam / silt‑loam | 27–33 % citeturn5search1turn5search8 | 12–15 % citeturn5search0 | 20–24 % | At the lower edge—time to irrigate |
| Clay loam | 33–40 % citeturn5search0turn5search2 | 18–24 % citeturn5search0 | 26–32 % | Approaching stress |
Field‑capacity (FC) = soil pores drained of gravity water;
Permanent‑wilting point (PWP) = water too tightly held for roots;
Readily available water ≈ upper 50 % of the FC‑to‑PWP range. Most tree‑care guides trigger irrigation when this band is half depleted—i.e., once VWC has fallen to roughly 60–55 % of FC citeturn11search0turn11search7.
Assume: FC = 30 %, PWP = 15 % (values derived from Oklahoma Extension table for a sandy‑clay loam) citeturn5search1
Total Available Water (TAW) = 30 % – 15 % = 15 %.
At 22 % VWC, the soil has lost 8 % (30 – 22) = 53 % of TAW—just beyond the 50 % allowable depletion threshold that precedes observable stress in broadleaf trees.
Tulip Trees are rated “moisture‑loving but anti‑water‑logging”: they grow fastest in deep, moderately moist, well‑drained loams and drop interior leaves early when drought hits citeturn1view3turn6search1turn6search6. Their fleshy magnolia‑type roots are oxygen‑hungry yet intolerant of extended dryness. Research nurseries therefore keep root‑zone moisture between ≈60 – 90 % of FC during establishment. Under that scheme, 22 % is a clear irrigation cue in loamy soils: still above stress, but enough deficit to allow air exchange after watering.
Nation‑wide surveys place average agricultural soils at ≈42 % sand, 42 % silt, 17 % clay—sandy‑ to silt‑loam citeturn8search1turn8search7. In summer, jang‑ma monsoon storms can spike VWC above 30 % for a day or two, but hot breaks and typhoon winds quickly pull readings down. A 22 % mid‑summer reading usually means:
- drainage after a rain event is complete;
- about two days of usable moisture remain before mild stress;
- deeper sensors (20 – 30 cm) will already be in the high‑teens.
| VWC reading | Meaning | Action |
|---|
| >30 % | At or just above FC; ensure drainage completes within 24–36 h | Do not irrigate; improve aeration if it stays >30 % for days |
| 28–30 % | Ideal target band | Maintain through rainfall or light irrigation |
| 22–27 % | Readily‑available water 50–15 % depleted | Irrigate soon—apply enough to add 6–8 % VWC (≈25 mm over root zone) |
| 18–21 % | Beginning of plant stress (leaf flagging on hot afternoons) | Water deeply; mulch; consider afternoon shade cloth for saplings |
| <18 % | Near PWP for loam; wilting risk | Emergency soak followed by regular schedule |
- Depth matters – Install sensors 15 – 25 cm where most feeder roots sit, not just at the surface.
- Use the 1‑2‑3 rule – Water the tree’s root area with 10 L per cm trunk diameter, spread around the drip line, whenever the probe reads ≤22 %.
- Mulch 5–8 cm with pine bark or leaf mould to buffer daily swings.
- Seasonal tweak – In early monsoon rains, let VWC swing between 22 – 30 %; during August dry spells keep it 24 – 30 %.
- Watch the leaves – Early yellowing or edge scorch signal VWC <20 % for several days; blackened petioles and slow shoot growth can indicate chronic over‑wetting (>30 %).
For the soils most Tulip Trees encounter in South Korea, 22 % VWC is the “time‑to‑water” signal rather than an alarm bell. Water soon, not immediately—bring the profile back up toward 28–30 % and then allow it to drain naturally. On sands it may still be plenty wet; on heavier clays it is edging into dryness, so always marry the number to soil texture, sensor depth, and the next week’s weather to keep your Tulip Tree happy and fast‑growing.