贯通
环境科学
下层林
天蓬
旱季
蒸发
蒸腾作用
降水
大气科学
水文学(农业)
稳定同位素比值
土壤水分
土壤科学
生态学
化学
地质学
地理
生物
气象学
物理
量子力学
光合作用
岩土工程
生物化学
作者
Cesar Dionisio Jiménez‐Rodríguez,Miriam Coenders‐Gerrits,Jochen Wenninger,Adriana Gonzalez-Angarita,H. H. G. Savenije
标识
DOI:10.5194/hess-2019-566
摘要
Abstract. Tropical wet forests are complex ecosystems with a large number of plant species. These environments are characterized by a high water availability throughout the whole year and a complex canopy structure. However, how the different sections of the canopy contribute to total evaporation is poorly understood. The aim of this work is to estimate the total evaporation flux and differentiate the contribution among canopy layers of a tropical wet forest in Costa Rica. Monitoring the fluxes during the dry season by making use of the energy balance to quantify the fluxes and stable water isotopes to trace the sources of water vapor. Total evaporation was 275.5 mm and represents 55.9 % of the recorded precipitation (498.8 mm), with 11.7 % of the precipitation being intercepted and evaporated along the forest canopy. The understory beneath 8 m contributed with 23.6 % of the evaporation and almost half of it comes from the first 2 m of the understory. Stable water isotope signatures show different soil water sources depending on the plant type. Palms make use of a water source with an isotope signature similar to precipitation and throughfall. Soil water with a fractionated signature is used by trees, bushes and lianas. The isotope signature of water vapor samples overlap among different heights, but it was not possible to make use of the keeling plot method due to the similar isotope signature of the possible sources of water vapor as well as the high water concentration even on the dryer days.
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