Effects of thinning on water stress and growth in Douglas-fir

1988 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilbert Aussenac ◽  
André Granier

The effects of a systematic thinning (alternate row) on water stress and growth in a 19-year-old Douglas-fir plantation (Pseudotsugamenziesii var. menziesii Franco) was studied during 5 years in northeastern France. Thinning has an important effect on water balance. The increase of the soil water reserve led to a lower duration and level of water stress in the thinned plot, especially during the first 3 years after thinning. This study revealed a rapid evolution of the water balance, since the evapotranspiration ratio of the two plots (control and thinned) had increased from 0.83 during the 1st year to 1.03 during the 5th year after thinning. Together with microclimate influences, thinning increased tree growth substantially (more than 100%); this growth increase resulted from a higher growth rate and longer growth periods (from 26 to 49 days).

1997 ◽  
pp. 379-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.I. Ferreira ◽  
C.A. Pacheco ◽  
C. Valancogne ◽  
J. Michaelsen ◽  
T. Ameglio ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabet Carpintero ◽  
Ana Andreu ◽  
Pedro J. Gómez-Giráldez ◽  
María P. González-Dugo

<p>In water-controlled systems, the evapotranspiration (ET) is a key indicator of the ecosystem health and the water status of the vegetation. Continuous monitoring of this variable over Mediterranean savannas (landscape consisting of widely-spaced oak trees combined with pasture, crops and shrubs) provides the baseline required to evaluate actual threats (e.g. vulnerable areas, land-use changes, invasive species, over-grazing, bush encroachment, etc.) and design management actions leading to reduce the economic and environmental vulnerability. However, the patched nature of these agropastoral ecosystems, with different uses (agricultural, farming, hunting), and their complex canopy structure, with various layers of vegetation and bare soil, pose additional difficulties. The combination of satellite mission with high/medium spatial/temporal resolutions provides appropriate information to characterize the variability of the Mediterranean savanna, assessing resource availability at local scales.</p><p>The aim of this work is to quantify ET and water stress at field-scale over a dehesa ecosystem located in Southern Spain, coupling remote sensing-based water and energy balance models. A soil water balance has been applied for five consecutive hydrological years (between 2012 and 2017) using the vegetation index (VI) based approach (VI-ETo model), on a daily scale and 30 m of spatial resolution. It combines FAO56 guidelines with the spectral response in the visible and near-infrared regions to compute more accurately the canopy transpiration. Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2 images, meteorological, and soil data have been used. This approach has been adapted to dehesa ecosystem, taking into account the double strata of annual grasses and tree canopies. However, the lack of available information about the spatial distribution of soil properties and the presence of multiple vegetation layers with very different root depths increase the uncertainty of water balance calculations. The combination with energy balance-based models may overcome these issues. In this case, the two-source energy balance model (TSEB) has been applied to explore the possibilities of integrating both approaches.  ET was estimated using TSEB in the days with available thermal data, more accurately assessing the reduction on ET due to soil water deficit, and allowing the adjustment of water stress coefficient in the VI-ETo model.</p><p>The modeled ET results have been validated with field observations (Santa Clotilde; 38º12’N, 4º17’ W; 736 m a.s.l.), measuring the energy balance components with an eddy covariance system and complementary instruments. The VI-ETo model has proven to be robust to monitor the vegetation water use of this complex ecosystem. However, the integration of the energy balance modelling has improved the estimations during the dry periods, with highly stressed vegetation, enabling a continuous monitoring of ET and water stress over this landscape.</p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 335-357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dirk Raes ◽  
Sam Geerts ◽  
Emmanuel Kipkorir ◽  
Joost Wellens ◽  
Ali Sahli

2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 2099-2120 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Kochendorfer ◽  
J. A. Ramírez

Abstract. The statistical-dynamical annual water balance model of Eagleson (1978) is a pioneering work in the analysis of climate, soil and vegetation interactions. This paper describes several enhancements and modifications to the model that improve its physical realism at the expense of its mathematical elegance and analytical tractability. In particular, the analytical solutions for the root zone fluxes are re-derived using separate potential rates of transpiration and bare-soil evaporation. Those potential rates, along with the rate of evaporation from canopy interception, are calculated using the two-component Shuttleworth-Wallace (1985) canopy model. In addition, the soil column is divided into two layers, with the upper layer representing the dynamic root zone. The resulting ability to account for changes in root-zone water storage allows for implementation at the monthly timescale. This new version of the Eagleson model is coined the Statistical-Dynamical Ecohydrology Model (SDEM). The ability of the SDEM to capture the seasonal dynamics of the local-scale soil-water balance is demonstrated for two grassland sites in the US Great Plains. Sensitivity of the results to variations in peak green leaf area index (LAI) suggests that the mean peak green LAI is determined by some minimum in root zone soil moisture during the growing season. That minimum appears to be close to the soil matric potential at which the dominant grass species begins to experience water stress and well above the wilting point, thereby suggesting an ecological optimality hypothesis in which the need to avoid water-stress-induced leaf abscission is balanced by the maximization of carbon assimilation (and associated transpiration). Finally, analysis of the sensitivity of model-determined peak green LAI to soil texture shows that the coupled model is able to reproduce the so-called "inverse texture effect", which consists of the observation that natural vegetation in dry climates tends to be most productive in sandier soils despite their lower water holding capacity. Although the determination of LAI based on complete or near-complete utilization of soil moisture is not a new approach in ecohydrology, this paper demonstrates its use for the first time with a new monthly statistical-dynamical model of the water balance. Accordingly, the SDEM provides a new framework for studying the controls of soil texture and climate on vegetation density and evapotranspiration.


2008 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 579-648
Author(s):  
J. P. Kochendorfer ◽  
J. A. Ramírez

Abstract. The statistical-dynamical annual water balance model of Eagleson (1978) is a pioneering work in the analysis of climate, soil and vegetation interactions. This paper describes several enhancements and modifications to the model that improve its physical realism at the expense of its mathematical elegance and analytical tractability. In particular, the analytical solutions for the root zone fluxes are re-derived using separate potential rates of transpiration and bare-soil evaporation. Those potential rates, along with the rate of evaporation from canopy interception, are calculated using the two-component Shuttleworth-Wallace (1985) canopy model. In addition, the soil column is divided into two layers, with the upper layer representing the dynamic root zone. The resulting ability to account for changes in root-zone water storage allows for implementation at the monthly timescale. This new version of the Eagleson model is coined the Statistical-Dynamical Ecohydrology Model (SDEM). The ability of the SDEM to capture the seasonal dynamics of the local-scale soil-water balance is demonstrated for two grassland sites in the US Great Plains. Sensitivity of the results to variations in peak green Leaf Area Index (LAI) suggests that the mean peak green LAI is determined by some minimum in root zone soil moisture during the growing season. That minimum appears to be close to the soil matric potential at which the dominant grass species begins to experience water stress and well above the wilting point, thereby suggesting an ecological optimality hypothesis in which the need to avoid water-stress-induced leaf abscission is balanced by the maximization of carbon assimilation (and associated transpiration). Finally, analysis of the sensitivity of model-determined peak green LAI to soil texture shows that the coupled model is able to reproduce the so-called "inverse texture effect", which consists of the observation that natural vegetation in dry climates tends to be most productive in sandier soils despite their lower water holding capacity. Although the determination of LAI based on near-complete utilization of soil moisture is not a new approach in ecohydrology, this paper demonstrates its use for the first time with a new monthly statistical-dynamical model of the water balance. Accordingly, the SDEM provides a new framework for studying the controls of soil texture and climate on vegetation density and evapotranspiration.


2013 ◽  
Vol 43 (10) ◽  
pp. 891-896 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Pollet ◽  
J.M. Henin ◽  
J. Hébert ◽  
B. Jourez

Douglas-fir is a relatively recent species in the central European forest landscape. It is not clear how its natural durability is influenced by silviculture. We therefore investigated how the natural durability of the Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) varies according to tree growth rate; subsequently, the influence of the nature of the wood (juvenile or mature) and radial position was also analyzed. For this purposes, a total of 60 trees grown in Wallonia (Southern Belgium) was felled: these consisted of 6 trees in each of 10 stands where the average tree girth was approximately 150 cm. Since the age of these plantations ranged from 40 to 69 years, the radial tree growth rate ranged between approximately 3 and 7 mm. In all the trees, standardized heartwood test specimens were taken from different radial positions in the butt log. The mass losses caused by the fungi Poria placenta and Coniophora puteana were assessed according to CEN/TS 15083-1 (2005). Poria placenta exhibited a higher decaying efficiency than C. puteana, leading to classify Douglas-fir wood as slightly durable (class 4). No difference was observed between the durability against P. placenta of juvenile and mature wood. Similarly, growth rate seemed to have no direct impact on durability. Durability was, however, significantly correlated with wood density. The effect of site and tree on the natural durability of the wood was also examined.


OENO One ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rémi Gaudin ◽  
Kamal Kansou ◽  
Jean-Christophe Payan ◽  
Anne Pellegrino ◽  
Christian Gary

<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Aims</strong>: A water stress index based on a water balance model was tested as a tool for classifying the water stress paths experienced by grapevines in various French Mediterranean vineyards. The relations between the index value and grapevine yield and berry quality (sugars, organic acids, anthocyanins) at harvest were investigated.</p><p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Methods and results</strong>: A data set of 102 situations, each combining one location, one variety, one vintage and one water regime (irrigation or, most often, no irrigation), was collected for the study. The Fraction of Transpirable Soil Water (FTSW) was simulated by a unique-soil-reservoir water balance model at a daily time step. Five classes of water deficit were delimited from specific decreasing thresholds of FTSW over four periods between flowering and harvest. These thresholds were derived from predawn leaf water potential values because over decades, grapegrowers and researchers have shared references and built expertise by using this variable throughout the Mediterranean region. A water stress index resulting from the levels of water deficit reached at each of the four periods of the cycle was calculated. This index was correlated with yield per vine, berry weight, and berry sugar and organic acid contents but not with berry anthocyanin content.</p><p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Conclusion</strong>: A simple water stress index, based on the water balance model, exhibited significant correlations with yield and berry quality for various cultivars and pedo-climatic conditions in Mediterranean vineyards.</p><p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Significance and impact of the study</strong>: This water stress index is a valuable tool for explaining the variations in grape yield and quality among various locations and years because it reflects the vineyard water stress history in relation to rainfall regime and soil conditions. Improvement would come from the simulation of FTSW during winter, notably for soils of high Total Transpirable Soil Water. One potential application is the quantification of water stress change brought by irrigation in Mediterranean vineyards, and its relation to grapevine production.</p>


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