Investigating hydrological recovery in regenerating coniferous stands in snow‐dominated watersheds using simultaneous localization and mapping‐enabled mobile terrestrial LiDAR

Author:

Potter Cydne R.1ORCID,Green Kim C.2,Peters Daniel L.13ORCID,Niemann K. Olaf1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography University of Victoria Victoria British Columbia Canada

2. Selkirk Innovates Selkirk College Castlegar British Columbia Canada

3. Watershed Hydrology and Ecology Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada University of Victoria Queenswood Campus Victoria British Columbia Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe return of snow accumulation and ablation processes in regenerating forests to pre‐disturbance conditions, collectively referred to as hydrological recovery, has been investigated in past decades through manual snow surveys in adjacent open, juvenile, and mature stands. The outcomes of such studies provide a general understanding of hydrological recovery but lack transferability to areas where stand structure and terrain conditions differ from the reference sites. The application of mobile terrestrial LiDAR to investigate peak snow water equivalent (SWE) and ablation rates beneath regenerating trees in a space‐for‐time substitution study design provides new insights on the process of hydrological recovery in snowmelt forests of British Columbia, Canada. Outcomes of this study better quantify the influence of tree growth on peak SWE and ablation rate at both the tree and stand level for north aspect mixed conifer stands. Recovery of these two processes differ with recovery of Peak SWE beginning when the trees in a stand reach 3 m in height and recovery of ablation rates beginning once trees reach 5 m in height. Additionally, the process of negative ablation recovery in early juvenile stands reported in previous studies is herein clearly observed, providing an improved understanding of forest canopy effects on hydrological recovery in juvenile stands. The methods used in this study, which are internationally applicable, increase transferability of outcomes to stands where canopy characteristics (i.e., height, crown cover, and heterogeneity) are not represented in reference sites.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Reference41 articles.

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