Evaporation and Transpiration From Multiple Proximal Forests and Wetlands

Author:

Shveytser Victoria12ORCID,Stoy Paul C.234ORCID,Butterworth Brian56ORCID,Wiesner Susanne27ORCID,Skaggs Todd H.8,Murphy Bailey3ORCID,Wutzler Thomas9,El‐Madany Tarek S.9ORCID,Desai Ankur R.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. United States Forest Service Colville WA USA

2. Department of Biological Systems Engineering University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USA

3. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USA

4. Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USA

5. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

6. NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory Boulder CO USA

7. Department of Plant and Earth Science University of Wisconsin–River Falls River Falls WI USA

8. U.S. Salinity Laboratory USDA‐ARS Riverside CA USA

9. Max‐Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Jena Germany

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is intensifying the hydrologic cycle and altering ecosystem function, including water flux to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration (ET). ET is made up of evaporation (E) via non‐stomatal surfaces, and transpiration (T) through plant stomata which are impacted by global changes in different ways. E and T are difficult to measure independently at the ecosystem scale, especially across multiple sites that represent different land use and land management strategies. To address this gap in understanding, we applied flux variance similarity (FVS) to quantify how E and T differ across 13 different ecosystems measured using eddy covariance in a 10 × 10 km area from the CHEESEHEAD19 experiment in northern Wisconsin, USA. The study sites included eight forests with a large deciduous broadleaf component, three evergreen needleleaf forests, and two wetlands. Average T/ET for the study period averaged nearly 52% in forested sites and 45% in wetlands, with larger values after excluding periods following rain events when evaporation from canopy interception may be expected. A dominance analysis revealed that environmental variables explained on average 69% of the variance of half‐hourly T, which decreased from summer to autumn. Deciduous and evergreen forests showed similar E trajectories over time despite differences in vegetation phenology, and vapor pressure deficit explained some 13% of the variance E in wetlands but only 5% or less in forests. Retrieval of E and T within a dense network of flux towers lends confidence that FVS is a promising approach for comparing ecosystem hydrology across multiple sites to improve our process‐based understanding of ecosystem water fluxes.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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