Potential for significant precipitation cycling by forest-floor litter and deadwood


Date

2023-03

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

The forest-floor litter layer can retain substantial volumes of water, thus affecting evaporation and soil-moisture dynamics. However, litter layer wetting/drying dynamics are often overlooked when estimating forest water budgets. Here, we present field and laboratory experiments characterizing water cycling in the forest-floor litter layer and outline its implications for subcanopy microclimatic conditions and for estimates of transpiration and recharge. Storage capacities of spruce needle litter and beech broadleaf litter averaged 3.1 and 1.9 mm, respectively, with drainage/evaporation timescales exceeding 2 days. Litter-removal experiments showed that litter reduced soil water recharge, reduced soil evaporation rates, and insulated against ground heat fluxes that impacted snowmelt. Deadwood stored similar to 0.7 mm of water, increasing with more advanced states of decomposition, and retained water for >7 days. Observed daily cycles in deadwood weight revealed decreasing water storage during daytime as evaporation progressed and increasing storage at night from condensation or absorption. Water evaporating from the forest-floor litter layer modulates the subcanopy microclimate by increasing humidity, decreasing temperature, and reducing VPD. Despite the relatively small litter storage capacity (<3.1 mm in comparison to similar to 10(2) mm for typical forest soil rooting zones), the litter layer alone retained and cycled 18% of annual precipitation, or 1/3 of annual evapotranspiration. These results suggest that overlooking litter interception may lead to substantial overestimates of recharge and transpiration in many forest ecosystems.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

16 (2)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

Wiley

Event

Edition / version

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Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

deadwood; evaporation; forest; interception; litter; precipitation partitioning; storage; water cycle

Organisational unit

03798 - Kirchner, James W. (emeritus) / Kirchner, James W. (emeritus) check_circle
03473 - Burlando, Paolo (emeritus) / Burlando, Paolo (emeritus) check_circle
08739 - Molnar, Peter (Tit. Prof) / Molnar, Peter (Tit. Prof)
02608 - Institut für Umweltingenieurwiss. / Institute of Environmental Engineering

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