Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.

Canopy interception, throughfall, stemflow, and runoff have received considerable attention during the study of water balance and hydrological processes in forested ecosystems. Past research has either neglected or underestimated the role of hydrological functions of litter layers, although some stu...

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Main Authors: Xiang Li, Jianzhi Niu, Baoyuan Xie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3728107?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6039ef020faa4da7885dd54f80adc0c42020-11-25T01:26:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0187e7032810.1371/journal.pone.0070328Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.Xiang LiJianzhi NiuBaoyuan XieCanopy interception, throughfall, stemflow, and runoff have received considerable attention during the study of water balance and hydrological processes in forested ecosystems. Past research has either neglected or underestimated the role of hydrological functions of litter layers, although some studies have considered the impact of various characteristics of rainfall and litter on litter interception. Based on both simulated rainfall and litter conditions in North China, the effect of litter mass, rainfall intensity and litter type on the maximum water storage capacity of litter (S) and litter interception storage capacity (C) were investigated under five simulated rainfall intensities and four litter masses for two litter types. The results indicated: 1) the S values increased linearly with litter mass, and the S values of broadleaf litter were on average 2.65 times larger than the S values of needle leaf litter; 2) rainfall intensity rather than litter mass determined the maximum interception storage capacity (Cmax ); Cmax increased linearly with increasing rainfall intensity; by contrast, the minimum interception storage capacity (Cmin ) showed a linear relationship with litter mass, but a poor correlation with rainfall intensity; 3) litter type impacted Cmax and Cmin ; the values of Cmax and Cmin for broadleaf litter were larger than those of needle leaf litter, which indicated that broadleaf litter could intercepte and store more water than needle leaf litter; 4) a gap existed between Cmax and Cmin , indicating that litter played a significant role by allowing rainwater to infiltrate or to produce runoff rather than intercepting it and allowing it to evaporate after the rainfall event; 5) Cmin was always less than S at the same litter mass, which should be considered in future interception predictions. Vegetation and precipitation characteristics played important roles in hydrological characteristics.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3728107?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiang Li
Jianzhi Niu
Baoyuan Xie
spellingShingle Xiang Li
Jianzhi Niu
Baoyuan Xie
Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Xiang Li
Jianzhi Niu
Baoyuan Xie
author_sort Xiang Li
title Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
title_short Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
title_full Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
title_fullStr Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
title_full_unstemmed Study on hydrological functions of litter layers in North China.
title_sort study on hydrological functions of litter layers in north china.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Canopy interception, throughfall, stemflow, and runoff have received considerable attention during the study of water balance and hydrological processes in forested ecosystems. Past research has either neglected or underestimated the role of hydrological functions of litter layers, although some studies have considered the impact of various characteristics of rainfall and litter on litter interception. Based on both simulated rainfall and litter conditions in North China, the effect of litter mass, rainfall intensity and litter type on the maximum water storage capacity of litter (S) and litter interception storage capacity (C) were investigated under five simulated rainfall intensities and four litter masses for two litter types. The results indicated: 1) the S values increased linearly with litter mass, and the S values of broadleaf litter were on average 2.65 times larger than the S values of needle leaf litter; 2) rainfall intensity rather than litter mass determined the maximum interception storage capacity (Cmax ); Cmax increased linearly with increasing rainfall intensity; by contrast, the minimum interception storage capacity (Cmin ) showed a linear relationship with litter mass, but a poor correlation with rainfall intensity; 3) litter type impacted Cmax and Cmin ; the values of Cmax and Cmin for broadleaf litter were larger than those of needle leaf litter, which indicated that broadleaf litter could intercepte and store more water than needle leaf litter; 4) a gap existed between Cmax and Cmin , indicating that litter played a significant role by allowing rainwater to infiltrate or to produce runoff rather than intercepting it and allowing it to evaporate after the rainfall event; 5) Cmin was always less than S at the same litter mass, which should be considered in future interception predictions. Vegetation and precipitation characteristics played important roles in hydrological characteristics.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3728107?pdf=render
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AT jianzhiniu studyonhydrologicalfunctionsoflitterlayersinnorthchina
AT baoyuanxie studyonhydrologicalfunctionsoflitterlayersinnorthchina
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