Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia

Management activities alter the structure of many tropical forest stands which can be expected to influence the magnitude of canopy water fluxes. The objectives of this study were to determine throughfall, stemflow and rainfall interception in differently managed forest stands, and to relate the observed pattern of rainfall partitioning to stand structural characteristics. The study was conducted in a lower montane rainforest region (800–1140 m asl) in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Stands of four management types (natural forest, forest subject to small-diameter timber extraction, forest subject to selective logging of large-diameter timber, and cacao agroforest under trees remaining from the natural forest) were analyzed with three replicates per use type. The tree basal area decreased from the natural forest (52.5 m2 ha 1) to the agroforest (19.4 m2 ha 1) which was paralleled by a reduction in mean tree height (trees 10 cm dbh) from 21.3 to 17.5 m. The estimated leaf area index (LAI), as derived from hemispherical photos, averaged 6.2 m2 m 2 in the natural forest, 5.3 in forests with small timber extraction, 5.0 in forests with large timber extraction, and 5.3 in the agroforest. The annual gross precipitation close to our different study plots varied locally between 2437 and 3424 mm during the time of the study. Throughfall was measured on 15–17 rain days per plot with a median of 70% of gross precipitation over all the natural forest plots, 79 and 80% in forest with small and large timber extraction respectively, and 81% in the agroforest. Stemflow was less than 1% in all studied use types. Thus, rainfall interception was highest in the natural forest where 30% (median) of the gross precipitation was re-evaporated back into the atmosphere, and much lower in the three other use types (18–20%). Variability in structure and rainfall partitioning was high even within the same forest use types, thus further analysis focused on gradual changes rather than categories. In the 12 stands, LAI alone did not correlate significantly with the pattern of rainfall partitioning, the throughfall percentage increased significantly with decreasing tree height (r2 = 0.63). In a multiple linear regression with tree height and LAI as influencing factors, 81% of the variation in throughfall percentage is explained. A possible reason for this tree height-LAI-throughfall relationship is that under the conditions prevailing in our study region the canopy may not completely dry up between subsequent rainfall events. Therefore, the actual water storage at the start of a rainfall event would be below its potential. We hypothesize that tall trees increase the vertical distribution of foliage and other canopy components contributing to the canopy water storage, resulting in a higher canopy roughness and a more effective energy exchange with the atmosphere. This would consequently lead to an increased re-evaporation of intercepted water, larger available water storage and, thus, a reduced throughfall in stands with tall trees.

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Main Authors: 62655 Dietz, J., 78518 Hölscher, D., 86259 Leuschner, C., 76920 Hendrayanto autores/as
Format: biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Berlín (Alemania): ELSEVIER, 2006
Subjects:PALMAE, APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA, CICLO HIDROLOGICO, COMPOSICION BOTANICA, AGRICULTURA, BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO, CUBIERTA DE COPAS, INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR, LLUVIA, AGUA DE LLUVIA, PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA, MEDICION,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2006.09.044
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:121970
record_format koha
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language English
topic PALMAE
APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA
CICLO HIDROLOGICO
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
AGRICULTURA
BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR
LLUVIA
AGUA DE LLUVIA
PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA
MEDICION
PALMAE
APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA
CICLO HIDROLOGICO
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
AGRICULTURA
BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR
LLUVIA
AGUA DE LLUVIA
PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA
MEDICION
spellingShingle PALMAE
APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA
CICLO HIDROLOGICO
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
AGRICULTURA
BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR
LLUVIA
AGUA DE LLUVIA
PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA
MEDICION
PALMAE
APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA
CICLO HIDROLOGICO
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
AGRICULTURA
BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR
LLUVIA
AGUA DE LLUVIA
PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA
MEDICION
62655 Dietz, J.
78518 Hölscher, D.
86259 Leuschner, C.
76920 Hendrayanto autores/as
Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
description Management activities alter the structure of many tropical forest stands which can be expected to influence the magnitude of canopy water fluxes. The objectives of this study were to determine throughfall, stemflow and rainfall interception in differently managed forest stands, and to relate the observed pattern of rainfall partitioning to stand structural characteristics. The study was conducted in a lower montane rainforest region (800–1140 m asl) in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Stands of four management types (natural forest, forest subject to small-diameter timber extraction, forest subject to selective logging of large-diameter timber, and cacao agroforest under trees remaining from the natural forest) were analyzed with three replicates per use type. The tree basal area decreased from the natural forest (52.5 m2 ha 1) to the agroforest (19.4 m2 ha 1) which was paralleled by a reduction in mean tree height (trees 10 cm dbh) from 21.3 to 17.5 m. The estimated leaf area index (LAI), as derived from hemispherical photos, averaged 6.2 m2 m 2 in the natural forest, 5.3 in forests with small timber extraction, 5.0 in forests with large timber extraction, and 5.3 in the agroforest. The annual gross precipitation close to our different study plots varied locally between 2437 and 3424 mm during the time of the study. Throughfall was measured on 15–17 rain days per plot with a median of 70% of gross precipitation over all the natural forest plots, 79 and 80% in forest with small and large timber extraction respectively, and 81% in the agroforest. Stemflow was less than 1% in all studied use types. Thus, rainfall interception was highest in the natural forest where 30% (median) of the gross precipitation was re-evaporated back into the atmosphere, and much lower in the three other use types (18–20%). Variability in structure and rainfall partitioning was high even within the same forest use types, thus further analysis focused on gradual changes rather than categories. In the 12 stands, LAI alone did not correlate significantly with the pattern of rainfall partitioning, the throughfall percentage increased significantly with decreasing tree height (r2 = 0.63). In a multiple linear regression with tree height and LAI as influencing factors, 81% of the variation in throughfall percentage is explained. A possible reason for this tree height-LAI-throughfall relationship is that under the conditions prevailing in our study region the canopy may not completely dry up between subsequent rainfall events. Therefore, the actual water storage at the start of a rainfall event would be below its potential. We hypothesize that tall trees increase the vertical distribution of foliage and other canopy components contributing to the canopy water storage, resulting in a higher canopy roughness and a more effective energy exchange with the atmosphere. This would consequently lead to an increased re-evaporation of intercepted water, larger available water storage and, thus, a reduced throughfall in stands with tall trees.
format
topic_facet PALMAE
APROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERA
CICLO HIDROLOGICO
COMPOSICION BOTANICA
AGRICULTURA
BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDO
CUBIERTA DE COPAS
INDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIAR
LLUVIA
AGUA DE LLUVIA
PRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICA
MEDICION
author 62655 Dietz, J.
78518 Hölscher, D.
86259 Leuschner, C.
76920 Hendrayanto autores/as
author_facet 62655 Dietz, J.
78518 Hölscher, D.
86259 Leuschner, C.
76920 Hendrayanto autores/as
author_sort 62655 Dietz, J.
title Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_short Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_full Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_fullStr Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia
title_sort rainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in central sulawesi, indonesia
publisher Berlín (Alemania): ELSEVIER,
publishDate 2006
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2006.09.044
work_keys_str_mv AT 62655dietzj rainfallpartitioninginrelationtoforeststructureindifferentlymanagedmontaneforeststandsincentralsulawesiindonesia
AT 78518holscherd rainfallpartitioninginrelationtoforeststructureindifferentlymanagedmontaneforeststandsincentralsulawesiindonesia
AT 86259leuschnerc rainfallpartitioninginrelationtoforeststructureindifferentlymanagedmontaneforeststandsincentralsulawesiindonesia
AT 76920hendrayantoautoresas rainfallpartitioninginrelationtoforeststructureindifferentlymanagedmontaneforeststandsincentralsulawesiindonesia
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1219702023-04-30T12:49:23ZRainfall partitioning in relation to forest structure in differently managed montane forest stands in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia 62655 Dietz, J. 78518 Hölscher, D. 86259 Leuschner, C. 76920 Hendrayanto autores/as Berlín (Alemania): ELSEVIER, 2006 enpdfManagement activities alter the structure of many tropical forest stands which can be expected to influence the magnitude of canopy water fluxes. The objectives of this study were to determine throughfall, stemflow and rainfall interception in differently managed forest stands, and to relate the observed pattern of rainfall partitioning to stand structural characteristics. The study was conducted in a lower montane rainforest region (800–1140 m asl) in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Stands of four management types (natural forest, forest subject to small-diameter timber extraction, forest subject to selective logging of large-diameter timber, and cacao agroforest under trees remaining from the natural forest) were analyzed with three replicates per use type. The tree basal area decreased from the natural forest (52.5 m2 ha 1) to the agroforest (19.4 m2 ha 1) which was paralleled by a reduction in mean tree height (trees 10 cm dbh) from 21.3 to 17.5 m. The estimated leaf area index (LAI), as derived from hemispherical photos, averaged 6.2 m2 m 2 in the natural forest, 5.3 in forests with small timber extraction, 5.0 in forests with large timber extraction, and 5.3 in the agroforest. The annual gross precipitation close to our different study plots varied locally between 2437 and 3424 mm during the time of the study. Throughfall was measured on 15–17 rain days per plot with a median of 70% of gross precipitation over all the natural forest plots, 79 and 80% in forest with small and large timber extraction respectively, and 81% in the agroforest. Stemflow was less than 1% in all studied use types. Thus, rainfall interception was highest in the natural forest where 30% (median) of the gross precipitation was re-evaporated back into the atmosphere, and much lower in the three other use types (18–20%). Variability in structure and rainfall partitioning was high even within the same forest use types, thus further analysis focused on gradual changes rather than categories. In the 12 stands, LAI alone did not correlate significantly with the pattern of rainfall partitioning, the throughfall percentage increased significantly with decreasing tree height (r2 = 0.63). In a multiple linear regression with tree height and LAI as influencing factors, 81% of the variation in throughfall percentage is explained. A possible reason for this tree height-LAI-throughfall relationship is that under the conditions prevailing in our study region the canopy may not completely dry up between subsequent rainfall events. Therefore, the actual water storage at the start of a rainfall event would be below its potential. We hypothesize that tall trees increase the vertical distribution of foliage and other canopy components contributing to the canopy water storage, resulting in a higher canopy roughness and a more effective energy exchange with the atmosphere. This would consequently lead to an increased re-evaporation of intercepted water, larger available water storage and, thus, a reduced throughfall in stands with tall trees. Incluye 42 referencias bibliográficas en las páginas 177-178Management activities alter the structure of many tropical forest stands which can be expected to influence the magnitude of canopy water fluxes. The objectives of this study were to determine throughfall, stemflow and rainfall interception in differently managed forest stands, and to relate the observed pattern of rainfall partitioning to stand structural characteristics. The study was conducted in a lower montane rainforest region (800–1140 m asl) in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Stands of four management types (natural forest, forest subject to small-diameter timber extraction, forest subject to selective logging of large-diameter timber, and cacao agroforest under trees remaining from the natural forest) were analyzed with three replicates per use type. The tree basal area decreased from the natural forest (52.5 m2 ha 1) to the agroforest (19.4 m2 ha 1) which was paralleled by a reduction in mean tree height (trees 10 cm dbh) from 21.3 to 17.5 m. The estimated leaf area index (LAI), as derived from hemispherical photos, averaged 6.2 m2 m 2 in the natural forest, 5.3 in forests with small timber extraction, 5.0 in forests with large timber extraction, and 5.3 in the agroforest. The annual gross precipitation close to our different study plots varied locally between 2437 and 3424 mm during the time of the study. Throughfall was measured on 15–17 rain days per plot with a median of 70% of gross precipitation over all the natural forest plots, 79 and 80% in forest with small and large timber extraction respectively, and 81% in the agroforest. Stemflow was less than 1% in all studied use types. Thus, rainfall interception was highest in the natural forest where 30% (median) of the gross precipitation was re-evaporated back into the atmosphere, and much lower in the three other use types (18–20%). Variability in structure and rainfall partitioning was high even within the same forest use types, thus further analysis focused on gradual changes rather than categories. In the 12 stands, LAI alone did not correlate significantly with the pattern of rainfall partitioning, the throughfall percentage increased significantly with decreasing tree height (r2 = 0.63). In a multiple linear regression with tree height and LAI as influencing factors, 81% of the variation in throughfall percentage is explained. A possible reason for this tree height-LAI-throughfall relationship is that under the conditions prevailing in our study region the canopy may not completely dry up between subsequent rainfall events. Therefore, the actual water storage at the start of a rainfall event would be below its potential. We hypothesize that tall trees increase the vertical distribution of foliage and other canopy components contributing to the canopy water storage, resulting in a higher canopy roughness and a more effective energy exchange with the atmosphere. This would consequently lead to an increased re-evaporation of intercepted water, larger available water storage and, thus, a reduced throughfall in stands with tall trees. PALMAEAPROVECHAMIENTO DE LA MADERACICLO HIDROLOGICOCOMPOSICION BOTANICAAGRICULTURA BOSQUE TROPICAL HUMEDOCUBIERTA DE COPASINDICE DE SUPERFICIE FOLIARLLUVIAAGUA DE LLUVIAPRECIPITACION ATMOSFERICAMEDICIONForest Ecology and Management (EUA)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2006.09.044