Soil Temperature, Environment, and Moisture Monitoring Network—a low-cost sensing network for Alabama
Publication Date
7-1-2025
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Volume
197
Issue
7
DOI
10.1007/s10661-025-14166-4
Abstract
In order to bolster drought assessment and forecasting capabilities in Alabama, The University of Alabama in Huntsville has developed a network of rapidly deployable, low-cost soil moisture, temperature, and environment monitoring stations (STEMMNet). This network provides near-real-time transmission of in-situ sensed, high temporal resolution soil data, offering an extension beyond climatological analysis into operational use. Stations are manufactured using commercially available, inexpensive hardware and use low-cost sensors which demonstrated comparable accuracy when evaluated against an existing research-grade soil moisture network. Months of testing in a variety of environments allowed for several system optimizations, yielding a robust network with a high uptime. Collaborations with outside agencies including Alabama Forestry and select National Weather Service offices proved the versatility and need for this network. This study aims to outline the design process, data flow, lab, and comparative performance analysis, network design, and outcomes of STEMMNet. Overall, the network has performed well and demonstrates the ability to obtain high-quality soil data from a low-cost, minimal footprint, rapidly deployable station.
Funding Number
NA20OAR4590495
Funding Sponsor
National Integrated Drought Information System
Keywords
Low-cost, Network, Soil moisture, Soil temperature
Department
Meteorology and Climate Science
Recommended Citation
Nick Perlaky, W. Lee Ellenburg, Udaysankar Nair, Nick Klein, and Michael B. Solomon. "Soil Temperature, Environment, and Moisture Monitoring Network—a low-cost sensing network for Alabama" Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-025-14166-4