Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests.
The behavior of intercepted snow on a stand of uneven-aged ponderosa pine in east-central Arizona was evaluated, with the use of a super 8-mm time-lapse movie camera, to determine the relative significance of snowfall interception in the water yield of this type forest. A snow load index was develop...
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The University of Arizona.
1973
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1915862015-10-23T04:37:27Z Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. Tennyson, Larry Charles,1940- Ffolliott, Peter F. The behavior of intercepted snow on a stand of uneven-aged ponderosa pine in east-central Arizona was evaluated, with the use of a super 8-mm time-lapse movie camera, to determine the relative significance of snowfall interception in the water yield of this type forest. A snow load index was developed to estimate interception storage for two trees in the field of view for discrete time periods. The snow load index, photographs, and climatic data were combined to evaluate accumulation and to identify and rank according to relative magnitudes the basic processes of canopy snow removal. The rate of snow accumulation, which was nonlinear, appeared to be a function of climatic conditions, the rate of incoming precipitation, and the density of crown foilage. Snowslide appeared to be the dominant process of canopy snow removal during the study period, with melt, wind erosion, evaporation of meltwater, and sublimation of canopy snow occurring in order of decreasing significance. Most of the intercepted snow reached the snowpack on the ground, representing no significant loss to the water budget on site. Some water apparently was lost because of evaporation and sublimation but these losses appeared to be comparatively minor. 1973 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191586 213393820 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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language |
en |
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NDLTD |
description |
The behavior of intercepted snow on a stand of uneven-aged ponderosa pine in east-central Arizona was evaluated, with the use of a super 8-mm time-lapse movie camera, to determine the relative significance of snowfall interception in the water yield of this type forest. A snow load index was developed to estimate interception storage for two trees in the field of view for discrete time periods. The snow load index, photographs, and climatic data were combined to evaluate accumulation and to identify and rank according to relative magnitudes the basic processes of canopy snow removal. The rate of snow accumulation, which was nonlinear, appeared to be a function of climatic conditions, the rate of incoming precipitation, and the density of crown foilage. Snowslide appeared to be the dominant process of canopy snow removal during the study period, with melt, wind erosion, evaporation of meltwater, and sublimation of canopy snow occurring in order of decreasing significance. Most of the intercepted snow reached the snowpack on the ground, representing no significant loss to the water budget on site. Some water apparently was lost because of evaporation and sublimation but these losses appeared to be comparatively minor. |
author2 |
Ffolliott, Peter F. |
author_facet |
Ffolliott, Peter F. Tennyson, Larry Charles,1940- |
author |
Tennyson, Larry Charles,1940- |
spellingShingle |
Tennyson, Larry Charles,1940- Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
author_sort |
Tennyson, Larry Charles,1940- |
title |
Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
title_short |
Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
title_full |
Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
title_fullStr |
Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Snowfall interception in Arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
title_sort |
snowfall interception in arizona ponderosa pine forests. |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
1973 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191586 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tennysonlarrycharles1940 snowfallinterceptioninarizonaponderosapineforests |
_version_ |
1718098611329302528 |