Artigo

Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years

In this study, we designed and built an automated system of collection and measurement of throughfall and stemflow, developing a new sampling methodology. Throughfall was measured by trough-type system of collectors, each collector with sampling area of 5 cm × 6 m, connected every six troughs to a l...

ver descrição completa

Autor principal: Cuartas, Luz Adriana
Outros Autores: Tomasella, J., Nobre, Antônio Donato, Hodnett, Martin G., Waterloo, M. J., Múnera, Juan Camilo
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: English
Publicado em: Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18642
id oai:repositorio:1-18642
recordtype dspace
spelling oai:repositorio:1-18642 Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years Cuartas, Luz Adriana Tomasella, J. Nobre, Antônio Donato Hodnett, Martin G. Waterloo, M. J. Múnera, Juan Camilo Climate Variation El Nino Evaporation Interception Measurement Method Partitioning Precipitation (climatology) Pristine Environment Rainfall Rainforest Spatial Variation Stemflow Throughfall Water Vapor Amazonia South America In this study, we designed and built an automated system of collection and measurement of throughfall and stemflow, developing a new sampling methodology. Throughfall was measured by trough-type system of collectors, each collector with sampling area of 5 cm × 6 m, connected every six troughs to a large tipping bucket raingauge. Our throughfall measurement system covered a larger surface area than do most commonly used randomly relocated gauges, reducing the spatial variability. Temporal resolution was high (5 min), allowing the study of the short-term dynamics of the interception process. Stemflow was collected from 65 trees and also measured by large tipping bucket raingauges. Water vapor exchange at the forest-atmosphere interface was derived from eddy covariance data from a flux tower in the same area as the interception study. During the study period (November 2002-October 2004) a mild El Niño year developed and total annual rainfall was considerably lower than the average for the region. The interception loss in the year with normal rainfall was 13.3%, compared to 22.6% of gross precipitation in the dry year. The interception difference is explained by the comparison of mean intensity and duration of events in the normal year (8.77 mm/h and 1.88 h) versus the driest year (5.36 mm/h and 2.32 h). Interception loss for the whole period represented 16.5% of the gross rainfall, with throughfall 82.9% and stemflow 0.6%. We used the analytical Gash model to estimate the interception loss. The model succeeded in capturing the variability associated to the variability in the characteristics of precipitation. This is the first study to show the variability of interception in relation to rainfall (seasonally and between years). © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 2020-06-15T22:02:23Z 2020-06-15T22:02:23Z 2007 Artigo https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18642 10.1016/j.agrformet.2007.04.008 en Volume 145, Número 1-2, Pags. 69-83 Restrito Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
institution Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia - Repositório Institucional
collection INPA-RI
language English
topic Climate Variation
El Nino
Evaporation
Interception
Measurement Method
Partitioning
Precipitation (climatology)
Pristine Environment
Rainfall
Rainforest
Spatial Variation
Stemflow
Throughfall
Water Vapor
Amazonia
South America
spellingShingle Climate Variation
El Nino
Evaporation
Interception
Measurement Method
Partitioning
Precipitation (climatology)
Pristine Environment
Rainfall
Rainforest
Spatial Variation
Stemflow
Throughfall
Water Vapor
Amazonia
South America
Cuartas, Luz Adriana
Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
topic_facet Climate Variation
El Nino
Evaporation
Interception
Measurement Method
Partitioning
Precipitation (climatology)
Pristine Environment
Rainfall
Rainforest
Spatial Variation
Stemflow
Throughfall
Water Vapor
Amazonia
South America
description In this study, we designed and built an automated system of collection and measurement of throughfall and stemflow, developing a new sampling methodology. Throughfall was measured by trough-type system of collectors, each collector with sampling area of 5 cm × 6 m, connected every six troughs to a large tipping bucket raingauge. Our throughfall measurement system covered a larger surface area than do most commonly used randomly relocated gauges, reducing the spatial variability. Temporal resolution was high (5 min), allowing the study of the short-term dynamics of the interception process. Stemflow was collected from 65 trees and also measured by large tipping bucket raingauges. Water vapor exchange at the forest-atmosphere interface was derived from eddy covariance data from a flux tower in the same area as the interception study. During the study period (November 2002-October 2004) a mild El Niño year developed and total annual rainfall was considerably lower than the average for the region. The interception loss in the year with normal rainfall was 13.3%, compared to 22.6% of gross precipitation in the dry year. The interception difference is explained by the comparison of mean intensity and duration of events in the normal year (8.77 mm/h and 1.88 h) versus the driest year (5.36 mm/h and 2.32 h). Interception loss for the whole period represented 16.5% of the gross rainfall, with throughfall 82.9% and stemflow 0.6%. We used the analytical Gash model to estimate the interception loss. The model succeeded in capturing the variability associated to the variability in the characteristics of precipitation. This is the first study to show the variability of interception in relation to rainfall (seasonally and between years). © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
format Artigo
author Cuartas, Luz Adriana
author2 Tomasella, J.
Nobre, Antônio Donato
Hodnett, Martin G.
Waterloo, M. J.
Múnera, Juan Camilo
author2Str Tomasella, J.
Nobre, Antônio Donato
Hodnett, Martin G.
Waterloo, M. J.
Múnera, Juan Camilo
title Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
title_short Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
title_full Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
title_fullStr Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
title_full_unstemmed Interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in Central Amazonia: Marked differences between normal and dry years
title_sort interception water-partitioning dynamics for a pristine rainforest in central amazonia: marked differences between normal and dry years
publisher Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
publishDate 2020
url https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18642
_version_ 1787145281933934592
score 11.653393