A multi-scale assessment of forest treatment impacts on evapotranspiration and water yield in the Sierra Nevada

被引:2
作者
Boden, Kate [1 ]
Philippus, Daniel [1 ]
Sytsma, Anneliese [1 ]
Kurzweil, Jake [2 ]
Randell, Jackie [1 ]
Kinoshita, Alicia M. [3 ]
Hogue, Terri S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Colorado Sch Mines, Golden, CO 80401 USA
[2] Mt Studies Inst, Durango, CO USA
[3] San Diego State Univ, San Diego, CA USA
关键词
disturbance hydrology; forest treatment; runoff; Sagehen; water yield; wildfire; DIE-OFF; STREAMFLOW; GROUNDWATER; CALIFORNIA; SNOWMELT; MODEL; FLUX;
D O I
10.1002/eco.2548
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The future of the Western United States is threatened by both an increase in wildfire frequency and a decrease in water availability. By reducing fuel loads, wildfire mitigation measures (forest treatments) can offer reduced fire severity and increased annual total runoff (water yield) via reduction in evapotranspiration (ET). While the benefits of forest treatments for fire management are well studied, their impact on ET and water yield remains largely unknown, and existing literature shows conflicting results. Here, we aim to resolve this ambiguity by quantifying the impact of forest treatments on ET and water yield, at spatially localized scales. Using daily average flow rates from sub-basin and basin scale gauges, 100-m LiDAR data, 800-m PRISM precipitation data and 30-m SSEBop ETa data, we analysed the impact of forest treatments on ETa and water yield in the Sagehen Experimental Watershed. Within treated areas of Sagehen, there is a linear relationship between loss of canopy cover and ETa reductions at the 100-m pixel scale when canopy cover loss exceeds 10%. The impact of treatment was highly localized, and across the entire watershed (30 km(2)), treated areas with reduced ETa only made up 4 km(2), similar to 10% of the Sagehen area. At sub-basin and basin scale, the magnitude of year-to-year ETa reduction was <15%, and there was no quantifiable increase in water yield. Instead, precipitation alone explained >= 85% of water yield variability at sub-basin and basin scale. Future forest management practices in the Sierra Nevada are essential for combating wildfire, but our results from Sagehen reveal that even at the subbasin scale (similar to 3 km(2)), 56% thinning treatment by area did not result in increased water yield.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Effect of hydrogen on plasticity of a-Fe: A multi-scale assessment
    Kumar, Pranav
    Ludhwani, Mohit M.
    Das, Sambit
    Gavini, Vikram
    Kanjarla, Anand
    Adlakha, Ilaksh
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY, 2023, 165
  • [42] Comparison of Methods to Estimate Snow Water Equivalent at the Mountain Range Scale: A Case Study of the California Sierra Nevada
    Wrzesien, Melissa L.
    Durand, Michael T.
    Pavelsky, Tamlin M.
    Howat, Ian M.
    Margulis, Steven A.
    Huning, Laurie S.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY, 2017, 18 (04) : 1101 - +
  • [43] Multi-scale evaluation of soil functional indicators for the assessment of water and soil retention in Mediterranean semiarid landscapes
    Mayor, Angeles G.
    Bautista, Susana
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2012, 20 : 332 - 336
  • [44] A simulation-based optimization model for watershed multi-scale irrigation water use with considering impacts of climate changes
    Jiang, Yao
    Xiong, Lvyang
    Xu, Zongxue
    Huang, Guanhua
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2021, 598
  • [45] Multi-scale assimilation of root zone soil water predictions
    Lu, Haishen
    Yu, Zhongbo
    Horton, Robert
    Zhu, Yonghua
    Wang, Zhenlong
    Hao, Zhenchun
    Xiang, Long
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2011, 25 (20) : 3158 - 3172
  • [46] Multi-scale habitat selection of elk in response to beetle-killed forest
    Lamont, Bryan G.
    Monteith, Kevin L.
    Merkle, Jerod A.
    Mong, Tony W.
    Albeke, Shannon E.
    Hayes, Matthew M.
    Kauffman, Matthew J.
    JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT, 2019, 83 (03) : 679 - 693
  • [47] Integration of multi-scale thermal satellite imagery for evaluation of daily evapotranspiration at sub-field scales
    Anderson, M. C.
    Kustas, W. P.
    Dulaney, W. P.
    Gao, F.
    Sumner, D.
    REMOTE SENSING AND HYDROLOGY, 2012, 352 : 132 - +
  • [48] Aerodynamic effects cause higher forest evapotranspiration and water yield reductions after wildfires in tall forests
    Meili, Naika
    Beringer, Jason
    Zhao, Jiacheng
    Fatichi, Simone
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2024, 30 (01)
  • [49] Biases of April 1 snow water equivalent records in the Sierra Nevada and their associations with large-scale climate indices
    Montoya, E. L.
    Dozier, J.
    Meiring, W.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2014, 41 (16) : 5912 - 5918
  • [50] Multi-Scale Assessment of the Economic Impacts of Flooding: Evidence from Firm to Macro-Level Analysis in the Chinese Manufacturing Sector
    Hu, Xi
    Pant, Raghav
    Hall, Jim W.
    Surminski, Swenja
    Huang, Jiashun
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (07)