Dry season plant water sourcing in contrasting tropical ecosystems of Costa Rica

Author:

Sánchez‐Murillo Ricardo1ORCID,Todini‐Zicavo Diego23,Poca María4ORCID,Birkel Christian56,Esquivel‐Hernández Germain7,Chavarría María Marta8,Zuecco Giulia3ORCID,Penna Daniele9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Texas at Arlington 500 Yates Street Arlington Texas 76019 USA

2. University School for Advanced Studies (IUSS) Pavia Italy

3. Department of Land, Environment, Agriculture and Forestry University of Padova Legnaro Italy

4. Grupo de Estudios Ambientales, Instituto de Matemática Aplicada San Luis Universidad Nacional de San Luis, CONICET San Luis Argentina

5. Water and Global Change Observatory, Department of Geography University of Costa Rica San José Costa Rica

6. Northern Rivers Institute University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

7. Stable Isotopes Research Group and Water Resources Management Laboratory, Chemistry School Universidad Nacional Heredia Costa Rica

8. Programa de Investigación Área de Conservación Guanacaste (ACG) Guanacaste Costa Rica

9. Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry (DAGRI) University of Florence Florence Italy

Abstract

AbstractTracer‐aided studies to understand plant water uptake sources and dynamics in tropical ecosystems are limited. Here, we report the analysis of dry season source water uptake patterns of five unique ecosystems of Costa Rica across altitudinal (<150–3,400 m asl) and latitudinal (Caribbean and Pacific slopes) gradients: evergreen and seasonal rainforests, cloud forest, Páramo and dry forest. Soil and plant samples were collected during the dry season in 2021. Plant and soil water extractions were conducted using centrifugation. Stem water extracted volume and stem total water content were calculated via gravimetric analysis. Water source contributions were estimated using a Bayesian mixing model. Isotope ratios in soil and stems exhibited a strong meteoric origin. Enrichment trends were only detected in stems and cactus samples within the dry forest ecosystem. Soil profiles revealed nearly uniform isotopic profiles; however, a depletion trend was observed in the Páramo ecosystem below 25 cm. More enriched compositions were reported in cactus samples for extracted water volumes above ~20% (adj. r2 = 0.34, p < 0.01). The most prominent dry season water source in the evergreen rainforest (74.0%), seasonal rainforest (86.4%) and cloud forest (66.0%) corresponded to well‐mixed soil water. In the Páramo ecosystem, recent rainfall produced by trade wind incursions resulted in the most significant water source (61.9%), whereas in the dry forest, mean annual precipitation (38.6%) and baseflow (33.1%) were the dominant sources. The latter highlights the prevalence of distinct water uptake sources between recent cold front rainfall (near‐surface soil storage) to more well‐mixed soil moisture during the dry season, revealing ecohydrological processing previously unknown in this tropical region.

Funder

International Atomic Energy Agency

Leverhulme Trust

Università degli Studi di Firenze

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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