Evaporation components of a boreal forest: Variations during the growing season

被引:97
|
作者
Grelle, A [1 ]
Lundberg, A [1 ]
Lindroth, A [1 ]
Moren, AS [1 ]
Cienciala, E [1 ]
机构
[1] LULEA UNIV TECHNOL, DEPT WATER RESOURCES ENGN, S-97187 LULEA, SWEDEN
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0022-1694(96)03267-2
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
To improve the understanding of interactions between the boreal forest and the climate system as a key issue for global climate change, the water budget of a mixed pine and spruce forest in central Sweden was estimated by measurements of the water flux components and the total evaporation flux during the period 16 May-31 October 1995. Total evaporation was measured using eddy correlation and the components were obtained using measurements of precipitation, throughfall, tree transpiration, and forest floor evaporation, On a daily basis, tree transpiration was the dominant evaporation component during the vegetation period. However, it could be efficiently blocked by a wet canopy associated with large interception evaporation. The accumulated total evaporation was 399 mm, transpiration was 243 mm, forest float evaporation was 56 mm and interception evaporation was 74 mm, The accumulated sum of interception, transpiration, and floor evaporation was 51 mm larger than the actual measured total evaporation. This difference was mainly attributed to the fact that transpiration was measured in a rather dense 50-year-old stand while total evaporation represented the average conditions of older, roughly 100-year-old stands. To compare eddy-correlation measurements with small-scale measurements of evaporation components, a source area analysis was made to select the flux data that give the best representation of the investigated stand. Especially under stable atmospheric conditions the requirements for surface homogeneity were very high and extreme care had to be taken to be aware of the flux source areas. Canopy water storage was determined by two methods: by the water balance of the canopy, which gave a result of 3.3 mm; and by the so-called minimum method based on plots of throughfall versus precipitation, which gave a much lower value of 1.5 mm. Seasonal interception evaporation constituted 30% of the precipitation. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:70 / 87
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Growing season water balance at a boreal jack pine forest
    Moore, KE
    Fitzjarrald, DR
    Sakai, RK
    Freedman, JM
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2000, 36 (02) : 483 - 493
  • [2] Effects of nitrogen fertilization on the forest floor carbon balance over the growing season in a boreal pine forest
    Metcalfe, D. B.
    Eisele, B.
    Hasselquist, N. J.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2013, 10 (12) : 8223 - 8231
  • [3] The biophysical climate mitigation potential of boreal peatlands during the growing season
    Helbig, Manuel
    Waddington, James M.
    Alekseychik, Pavel
    Amiro, Brian
    Aurela, Mika
    Barr, Alan G.
    Black, T. Andrew
    Carey, Sean K.
    Chen, Jiquan
    Chi, Jinshu
    Desai, Ankur R.
    Dunn, Allison
    Euskirchen, Eugenie S.
    Flanagan, Lawrence B.
    Friborg, Thomas
    Garneau, Michelle
    Grelle, Achim
    Harder, Silvie
    Heliasz, Michal
    Humphreys, Elyn R.
    Ikawa, Hiroki
    Isabelle, Pierre-Erik
    Iwata, Hiroki
    Jassal, Rachhpal
    Korkiakoski, Mika
    Kurbatova, Juliya
    Kutzbach, Lars
    Lapshina, Elena
    Lindroth, Anders
    Lofvenius, Mikaell Ottosson
    Lohila, Annalea
    Mammarella, Ivan
    Marsh, Philip
    Moore, Paul A.
    Maximov, Trofim
    Nadeau, Daniel F.
    Nicholls, Erin M.
    Nilsson, Mats B.
    Ohta, Takeshi
    Peichl, Matthias
    Petrone, Richard M.
    Prokushkin, Anatoly
    Quinton, William L.
    Roulet, Nigel
    Runkle, Benjamin R. K.
    Sonnentag, Oliver
    Strachan, Ian B.
    Taillardat, Pierre
    Tuittila, Eeva-Stiina
    Tuovinen, Juha-Pekka
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2020, 15 (10):
  • [4] Growing season and spatial variations of carbon fluxes of Arctic and boreal ecosystems in Alaska (USA)
    Ueyama, Masahito
    Iwata, Hiroki
    Harazono, Yoshinobu
    Euskirchen, Eugenie S.
    Oechel, Walter C.
    Zona, Donatella
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2013, 23 (08) : 1798 - 1816
  • [5] Controls on evaporation in a boreal spruce forest
    Betts, AK
    Goulden, M
    Wofsy, S
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 1999, 12 (06) : 1601 - 1618
  • [6] Microbial community response to growing season and plant nutrient optimisation in a boreal Norway spruce forest
    Haas, Julia C.
    Street, Nathaniel R.
    Sjodin, Andreas
    Lee, Natuschka M.
    Hogberg, Mona N.
    Nasholm, Torgny
    Hurry, Vaughan
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2018, 125 : 197 - 209
  • [7] Bark gnawing of forest trees by voles during the growing season
    Josef Suchomel
    Marta Heroldová
    Jan Šipoš
    Ladislav Čepelka
    Martina Dokulilová
    Luboš Purchart
    European Journal of Forest Research, 2021, 140 : 1431 - 1440
  • [8] Bark gnawing of forest trees by voles during the growing season
    Suchomel, Josef
    Heroldova, Marta
    Sipos, Jan
    Cepelka, Ladislav
    Dokulilova, Martina
    Purchart, Lubos
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2021, 140 (06) : 1431 - 1440
  • [9] Contribution of understory evaporation in a tropical wet forest during the dry season
    Jimenez-Rodriguez, Cesar Dionisio
    Coenders-Gerrits, Miriam
    Wenninger, Jochen
    Gonzalez-Angarita, Adriana
    Sayenije, Hubert
    HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2020, 24 (04) : 2179 - 2206
  • [10] Decreasing photosynthesis at different spatial scales during the late growing season on a boreal cutover
    Martel, MC
    Margolis, HA
    Coursolle, C
    Bigras, FJ
    Heinsch, FA
    Running, SW
    TREE PHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 25 (06) : 689 - 699