echard
See also: Echard
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Ancient Greek ἔχω (ékhō, “to hold”) + ἄρδω (árdō, “to water, to irrigate”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈɛkˌɑː(ɹ)d/
Noun
    
echard (plural echards)
- (dated) The portion of water in a sample of soil that is not available to vegetation.
- 1905, Arthur Tansley, The New Phytologist, page 238:- The echard of a given habitat is experimentally ascertained by isolating a block of soil by impermeable plates, allowing it to dry slowly and determining its water-content at the time when the plants growing on it are wilting irrecoverably
 
- 1951, John Smith, Distribution of Tree Species in the Sudan in Relation to Rainfall and Soil Texture:- Grasses sprout on the sands long before the early rains have restored the echard of adjoining clays and given a surplus as chresard which can initiate grass growth.
 
 
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