Summary: | Vegetation exerts profound influences on evapotranspiration (ET) partitioning. Many studies have demonstrated the positive impact of vegetation cover on the ratio of transpiration (T) to ET. Whether it is universally true with regard to different vegetation types and different sites is understudied. In this study, five sites in Northern China with different vegetation types were selected for comparison study.ET partitioning is conducted using an approach based on the concept of the underlying water use efficiency with eddy covariance measurements. The results show various patterns of vegetation’s effects over ET partitioning and, when compared with existing studies, also reveal a new relationship between the T/ET ratio and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) at some of the sites. At the alpine meadow site, the T/ET ratio gradually increase when NDVI is low and rapidly increase as NDVI go beyond a certain value, whereas at the arid shrub site, the T/ET ratio rapidly increase when NDVI is low and plateaus at a certain value when NDVI reaches a relatively high value. In deciduous forest, the T/ET ratio becomes unresponsive to NDVI beyond a threshold value. This study also reveals that irrigation schemes play a major role in determining the correlation between the T/ET ratio and NDVI because the T/ET ratio becomes well correlated with NDVI in case of flood irrigation and irrelevant to NDVI in the case of mulch drip irrigation. Furthermore, this study helps us to understand ET partitioning under different sites and different human activities such as irrigation. These findings can help policymakers to better understand the connection between vegetation and climate change or human activities and provide significant information for water management policy.
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