Ecology
; Environmental Sciences
; Water Resources
WOS研究方向:
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
; Water Resources
英文摘要:
Evaporation of precipitation from plant surfaces, or interception, is a major component of the global water budget. Interception has been measured and/or modelled across a wide variety of forest types; however, most studies have focused on mature, second-growth forests, and few studies have examined interception processes across forest age classes. We present data on two components of interception, total canopy interception (E-i) and litter interception-that is, O-i+O-e horizon layers-(E-ff), across a forest age chronosequence, from 2years since harvest to old growth. We used precipitation, throughfall, and stemflow collectors to measure total rainfall (P) and estimate E-i; and collected litter biomass and modelled litter wetting and drying to estimate evaporative loss from litter. Canopy E-i, P minus throughfall, increased rapidly with forest age and then levelled off to a maximum of 21% of P in an old-growth site. Stemflow also varied across stands, with the highest stemflow (similar to 8% of P) observed in a 12-year-old stand with high stem density. Modelled E-ff was 4-6% of P and did not vary across sites. Total stand-level interception losses (E-i+E-ff) were best predicted by stand age (R-2=0.77) rather than structural parameters such as basal area (R-2=0.49) or leaf area (R-2<0.01). Forest age appears to be an important driver of interception losses from forested mountain watersheds even when stand-level structural variables are similar. These results will contribute to our understanding of water budgets across the broader matrix of forest ages that characterize the modern forest landscape.
1.US Forest Serv, USDA, Southern Res Stn, Coweeta Hydrol Lab, Otto, NC 28763 USA 2.Joseph W Jones Ecol Res Ctr, Newton, GA USA 3.Univ Minnesota, Dept Forest Resources, St Paul, MN 55108 USA
Recommended Citation:
Brantley, Steven T.,Miniat, Chelcy F.,Bolstad, Paul V.. Rainfall partitioning varies across a forest age chronosequence in the southern Appalachian Mountains[J]. ECOHYDROLOGY,2019-01-01,12(4)