About
Contact
Help
Sending publications
How to publish
Advanced Search
View Item 
  •   Home
  • Facultad de Ciencias
  • Artículos de revistas
  • View Item
  •   Home
  • Facultad de Ciencias
  • Artículos de revistas
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse byCommunities and CollectionsDateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionDateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

My Account

Login to my accountRegister
Biblioteca Digital - Universidad de Chile
Revistas Chilenas
Repositorios Latinoamericanos
Tesis LatinoAmericanas
Tesis chilenas
Related linksRegistry of Open Access RepositoriesOpenDOARGoogle scholarCOREBASE
My Account
Login to my accountRegister

Alteration of the hydrologic cycle due to forest clearing and its consequences for rainforest succession

Artículo
Thumbnail
Open/Download
IconDiaz_ MFrancisca.pdf (609.9Kb)
Publication date
2007-06
Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Díaz, María Francisca
Cómo citar
Alteration of the hydrologic cycle due to forest clearing and its consequences for rainforest succession
.
Copiar
Cerrar

Author
  • Díaz, María Francisca;
  • Bigelow, Seth;
  • Armesto, Juan J.;
Abstract
Since the 19th century, 41% of the land on Chiloe´ Island (418500S, 738400W) in Chile was cleared. Following clearing and burning, much of the converted land remains in sparse shrub cover. We hypothesized that the arrested conversion back to forests may reflect a nearly permanent condition associated with a rise in the water table. To evaluate this possibility we acquired data from a 60-year old evergreen forest and an area in shrub cover to parameterize two hydrologic models; one that accounts for hourly interception losses and predicts net precipitation (Gash model), the other that calculates hourly transpiration from both overstory and understory components as well as evaporation from the soil (a modified Penman–Monteith model). In addition, standpipes were installed to record water table levels over 18 months. The fraction of a total annual precipitation (#2;2100 mm) transpired by shrub and forest cover differed (8% versus 22%) roughly in proportion to differences in the leaf area index (2.2 versus 5.0). Although whole canopy (stomatal) conductances were similar, the aerodynamic conductance was more than three-fold higher for forests compared with shrub cover (#2;12 mol m#3;2 s#3;1 versus 3 mol m#3;2 s#3;1). The frequent wetting of tree canopies, combined with an average wind speed of 0.74 m s#3;1, resulted in #2;30% interception losses from forests compared with 1% of annual precipitation lost through this pathway from shrub cover. As a result of these differences, only about half of the precipitation enters the ground under forest cover compared to 90% under shrub cover. This difference in canopy interception losses accounts for a rise in the water table from an average of 45–10 cm. The high water table prevents normal tree regeneration. This condition is stable unless an effort is made to provide an elevated substrate for tree seedlings to become established.
Patrocinador
Field work was funded by a Doctoral Thesis (Conicyt) and Universidad de Chile PG/ 17/02 grants to MFD. Final manuscript preparation was supported by the Center for Advanced Studies in Ecology and Biodiversity (Fondap-Fondecyt grant 1501-0001) and by a Doctoral Grant from Millennium Project (P02-051-F).
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/118842
ISSN: 0378-1127
Quote Item
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, v.: 244, issue: 1-3, p.: 32-40, JUN 15 2007
Collections
  • Artículos de revistas
xmlui.footer.title
31 participating institutions
More than 73,000 publications
More than 110,000 topics
More than 75,000 authors
Published in the repository
  • How to publish
  • Definitions
  • Copyright
  • Frequent questions
Documents
  • Dating Guide
  • Thesis authorization
  • Document authorization
  • How to prepare a thesis (PDF)
Services
  • Digital library
  • Chilean academic journals portal
  • Latin American Repository Network
  • Latin American theses
  • Chilean theses
Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
Universidad de Chile

© 2020 DSpace
  • Access my account