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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Spatial and temporal patterns of throughfall quantity and quality in a tropical montane forest in Ecuador

Wolfgang WilckeAlexander ZimmermannHelmut Elsenbeer

subject

HydrologyCanopyDeposition (aerosol physics)Spatial ecologyEnvironmental scienceSpatial variabilityInstitut für Umweltwissenschaften und GeographieEpiphytePrecipitationThroughfallSea levelWater Science and Technology

description

Summary In forests, complex canopy processes control the change in volume and chemical composition of rain water. We hypothesize that (i) spatial patterns, (ii) the temporal stability of spatial patterns, and (iii) the temporal course of solute concentrations can be used to explore these processes. The study area at 1950 m above sea level in the south Ecuadorian Andes is far away from anthropogenic emission sources and marine influences. It received ca. 2200 mm of rain annually. We collected rain and throughfall on an event and within-event basis for five precipitation periods between August and October 2005 at up to 25 sites and analyzed the samples for pH and concentrations of K, Na, Ca, Mg, NH 4 + , Cl−, NO 3 - , PO 4 3 - , and total N (TN), P (TP), and organic C (TOC). Cumulative throughfall amounted to 79% of rainfall. Compared with other tropical forests, rainfall solute concentrations were low and throughfall solute concentrations similar. Volumes and solute concentrations of rainfall were spatially and temporally little variable. The spatial coefficient of variation for throughfall volumes was 53%, for solute concentrations 28–292%, and for deposition 33–252%. Temporal persistence of spatial patterns was high for throughfall volumes and varied among solutes. Spatial patterns of K, Mg and TOC concentrations in throughfall were highly persistent. The spatial patterns of throughfall fluxes were less stable than those of concentrations. During a monitoring time of 72 h, solute concentrations in throughfall of selected rain events remained at a similar level indicating that the leachable element pool in the canopy was not exhausted. Our results demonstrate that the passage of rain through the canopy of a tropical montane forest in Ecuador results in a spatially heterogeneous throughfall pattern with a considerable stability during three months. There is a large leachable element pool in the canopy, which is not depleted by the typical light rain within 72 h.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2007.06.012