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Article Dans Une Revue Biogeosciences Année : 2017

Quantification of dynamic soil–vegetation feedbacks following an isotopically labelled precipitation pulse

Résumé

The presence of vegetation alters hydrological cycles of ecosystems. Complex plant-soil interactions govern the fate of precipitation input and water transitions through ecosystem compartments. Disentangling these interactions is a major challenge in the field of ecohydrology and a pivotal foundation for understanding the carbon cycle of semiarid ecosystems. Stable water isotopes can be used in this context as tracer to quantify water movement through soilvegetation- atmosphere interfaces. The aim of this study is to disentangle vegetation effects on soil water infiltration and distribution as well as dynamics of soil evaporation and grassland water use in a Mediterranean cork oak woodland during dry conditions. An irrigation experiment using delta O-18 labelled water was carried out in order to quantify distinct effects of tree and herbaceous vegetation on the infiltration and distribution of event water in the soil profile. Dynamic responses of soil and herbaceous vegetation fluxes to precipitation regarding event water use, water uptake depth plasticity, and contribution to ecosystem soil evaporation and transpiration were quantified. Total water loss to the atmosphere from bare soil was as high as from vegetated soil, utilizing large amounts of unproductive evaporation for transpiration, but infiltration rates decreased. No adjustments of main root water uptake depth to changes in water availability could be observed during the experiment. This forces understorey plants to compete with adjacent trees for water in deeper soil layers at the onset of summer. Thus, understorey plants are subjected to chronic water deficits faster, leading to premature senescence at the onset of drought. Despite this water competition, the presence of cork oak trees fosters infiltration and reduces evapotranspirative water losses from the understorey and the soil, both due to altered microclimatic conditions under crown shading. This study highlights complex soilplant- atmosphere and inter-species interactions controlling rain pulse transitions through a typical Mediterranean savannah ecosystem, disentangled by the use of stable water isotopes.
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Dates et versions

hal-01596622 , version 1 (27-09-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

Arndt Piayda, Maren Dubbert, Rolf Siegwolf, Matthias Cuntz, Christiane Werner. Quantification of dynamic soil–vegetation feedbacks following an isotopically labelled precipitation pulse. Biogeosciences, 2017, 14 (9), pp.2293-2306. ⟨10.5194/bg-14-2293-2017⟩. ⟨hal-01596622⟩
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