Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos

Bibliography: leaves 92-96. === The objective of the present study was to investigate mist interception by Mountain Fynbos under non-rainfall conditions. Quantitative measurements and qualitative observations of plant-drip and stem-flow from selected plant species were recorded at five experimental...

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Main Author: Snow, Christopher Spencer
Other Authors: Fuggle, Richard Francis
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14296
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-142962020-10-06T05:11:18Z Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos Snow, Christopher Spencer Fuggle, Richard Francis Environmental Studies Bibliography: leaves 92-96. The objective of the present study was to investigate mist interception by Mountain Fynbos under non-rainfall conditions. Quantitative measurements and qualitative observations of plant-drip and stem-flow from selected plant species were recorded at five experimental sites on the Back Table of Table Mountain, Cape Province. Plant-drip and stem-flow catching devices were designed and installed in order to collect the moisture intercepted by plants. The results indicated that mist interception by the vegetation was influenced by wind speed, density of mist and by the morphological characteristics of the plants. Greater interception occurred when dense mist was accompanied by high wind speeds. The interception ability was found to increase with plant size. Interception efficiency depended on the leaf morphology of the plants. Narrow-sclerophylls (e.g. Psoralea pinnata) were found to be more effective in intercepting mist droplets than broad-clerophylls (e.g. Leucadendron salignum). The portioning of intercepted water into plant-drip and stem-flow was largely influenced by the shape of the plant. The mean rate of water yield per plant observed during five periods of rainfree, misty conditions, was 71 ml hr-1 . Rainfall is, therefore, not the sole source of moisture contributing to the water balance. The additional moisture intercepted by vegetation should, therefore, be taken into consideration in studies of water balance and hydrology. 2015-10-25T16:59:47Z 2015-10-25T16:59:47Z 1985 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14296 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Environmental Studies

spellingShingle Environmental Studies

Snow, Christopher Spencer
Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
description Bibliography: leaves 92-96. === The objective of the present study was to investigate mist interception by Mountain Fynbos under non-rainfall conditions. Quantitative measurements and qualitative observations of plant-drip and stem-flow from selected plant species were recorded at five experimental sites on the Back Table of Table Mountain, Cape Province. Plant-drip and stem-flow catching devices were designed and installed in order to collect the moisture intercepted by plants. The results indicated that mist interception by the vegetation was influenced by wind speed, density of mist and by the morphological characteristics of the plants. Greater interception occurred when dense mist was accompanied by high wind speeds. The interception ability was found to increase with plant size. Interception efficiency depended on the leaf morphology of the plants. Narrow-sclerophylls (e.g. Psoralea pinnata) were found to be more effective in intercepting mist droplets than broad-clerophylls (e.g. Leucadendron salignum). The portioning of intercepted water into plant-drip and stem-flow was largely influenced by the shape of the plant. The mean rate of water yield per plant observed during five periods of rainfree, misty conditions, was 71 ml hr-1 . Rainfall is, therefore, not the sole source of moisture contributing to the water balance. The additional moisture intercepted by vegetation should, therefore, be taken into consideration in studies of water balance and hydrology.
author2 Fuggle, Richard Francis
author_facet Fuggle, Richard Francis
Snow, Christopher Spencer
author Snow, Christopher Spencer
author_sort Snow, Christopher Spencer
title Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
title_short Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
title_full Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
title_fullStr Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
title_full_unstemmed Mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
title_sort mist interception by three species of mountain fynbos
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14296
work_keys_str_mv AT snowchristopherspencer mistinterceptionbythreespeciesofmountainfynbos
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