• Title of article

    Hydrological implications of soil water-repellency in Eucalyptus globulus forests, north-central Portugal

  • Author/Authors

    A.J.D. Ferreira، نويسنده , , C.O.A. Coelho، نويسنده , , R.P.D. Walsh، نويسنده , , RA Shakesby، نويسنده , , A. Ceballos، نويسنده , , S.H Doerr، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    165
  • To page
    177
  • Abstract
    Soil water-repellency (hydrophobicity) is a widespread property of Eucalyptus globulus and Pinus pinaster forest soils in central and north littoral Portugal and is particularly severe during the summer dry conditions. This paper attempts to assess the impact of water repellency on overland flow and runoff generation at plot and catchment scales for two types of terrain with differing land management and degree of soil hydrophobicity: (i) highly hydrophobic land with regenerating eucalyptus forest following fire; and (ii) largely hydrophilic land on which deep-ploughing prior to planting eucalyptus seedlings had eliminated hydrophobicity. Overland flow responses were monitored over a 40-month period for two 8 m×2 m plots and streamflow was recorded continuously at gauging stations for two small catchments of predominantly regrowth eucalyptus and ploughed/planted eucalyptus, respectively. Soil hydrophobicity was assessed using the Water Drop Penetration Time (WDPT) test. Seasonal variations in the factors influencing plot overland flow response were assessed for each land management type using multivariate analysis. For the regrowth eucalyptus plot, overland flow generation was found to be negatively correlated with antecedent soil moisture in summer (suggesting that hydrophobicity-linked Hortonian overland flow is then dominant), but positively related to throughflow in winter (suggesting that saturation overland flow generation in a hydrophilic-phase soil was at that time the dominant mechanism). In the ploughed/planted areas, negative correlations with soil moisture were found neither in summer nor winter. Rainfall amount (and in winter also antecedent precipitation) were found to be the variables most strongly and positively related to overland flow volume. The plot results are compared with streamflow responses for the small catchments.
  • Keywords
    Hydrophobicity , Throughflow , Saturation overland flow , Hortonian overland flow , Antecedent soil moisture , Catchment runoff
  • Journal title
    Journal of Hydrology
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    Journal of Hydrology
  • Record number

    1096276