The previously derived coupled source-sink modeling approach for vertically heterogeneous cylindrical domains was extended to conditions prevailing when water uptake is controlled by diurnally time-varying, transpirationdriven plant resistance and by cyclic water applications, both leading to unsteady flow regimes in the rooting zone. Examples include simulations of diurnal variations in water uptake rates by plant roots (sinks) in homogeneous and vertically heterogeneous soils of various texture, under conditions of steady, continuous and unsteady water application, representative of various irrigation scheduling practices: pulsed, daily, and every few days. In coarsetextured, fast-responding soil, it is possible to meet the diurnal transpiration demand, but water losses through deep percolation are high. In soils of finer texture, daily short applications in the morning result in uptake patterns skewed toward morning, whereas all-day-long irrigation pushes the temporal uptake pattern toward the afternoon. In fine-textured soils irrigated every few days, similar water uptake volumes result from either prolonged, all-day, or short, morning applications, but the through-cycle uptake rates are more even with all-day applications.Abbreviations: MFP, matric flux potential; RWUR, relative water uptake rate; RWUV, relative water uptake volume; WUR, water uptake rate; WUV, water uptake volume. W e derived both exact and approximate solutions for steady and timedependent How from point sources in vertically heterogeneous cylindrical domains (Communar and Friedman, 2012)-solutions that reproduce flow patterns similar to those generated by a square array of water sources. The analytical solutions are based on the assumption that the hydraulic conductivity is an exponential function of both pressure head and depth (Philip, 1972;Philip and Forrester, 1975) and a linear function of water content (Warrick, 1974). An additional assumption, that plant roots extract water from the soil under conditions of maximum suction, was made in deriving the coupled source-sink model used for evaluating the temporal patterns of water uptake rates (WUR) under various intermittent irrigation scenarios. The steady version of this model provides useful results that describe the influence of the density and geometry of plants and water sources (Communar and Friedman, 2010a, 2010b, 2010cMeiri et al., 2011) and of soil vertical heterogeneity (Communar and Friedman, 2012) on the relative water uptake rate (RWUR, the ratio between water uptake and water application rates). In this study, we developed a modified water-uptake model. The modification includes a time-dependent sink (plant-atmosphere) resistance that accounts for hourly changes in water uptake that follow the transpiration demand