Publication Date:
2008-08-30
Description:
Evaporation from the forest floor (EFF) in a deciduous broadleaf forest was measured using microlysimeter and closed-chamber systems. The microlysimeter was used at six points in the experimental basin, and measurements gave different EFF values at different points. This could be attributed to the local photoenvironment of each sampling point, rather than to litter conditions, if the spatial variation in air temperature (Ta) or vapour pressure deficit (VPD) at the forest floor was small within this basin. A detachable microlysimeter measured condensation in the litter layer during the night, indicating that the litter layer, as well as the mulch layer, played a role in preventing evaporation from the soil layer. The closed-chamber system made it possible to continuously measure long-term EFF. EFF was closely related to VPD; even during the night, when solar radiation was zero, EFF amounted to 14.0% of the daily EFF. The daily EFF was 0.20 ± 0.13 mm day-1 during the study period, with two seasonal peaks: in late spring (0.31 mm day-1 in April) and early fall (0.22 mm day-1 in September). The former peak has been reported from two deciduous forests in Japan and is strongly related to the solar radiation reaching the forest floor when the trees are dormant. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Print ISSN:
0885-6087
Electronic ISSN:
1099-1085
Topics:
Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying
,
Geography
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