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Impacts of fire on forest age and runoff in mountain ash forests

  • Stephen Wood
  • , Jason Beringer
  • , Lindsay Beaumont Hutley
  • , Anthony D McGuire
  • , Albert D Van Djik
  • , Musa Kilinc

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    Runoff from mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F.Muell.) forested catchments has been shown to decline significantly in the few decades following fire - returning to pre-fire levels in the following centuries - owing to changes in ecosystem water use with stand age in a relationship known as Kuczera's model. We examined this relationship between catchment runoff and stand age by measuring whole-ecosystem exchanges of water using an eddy covariance system measuring forest evapotranspiration (ET) combined with sap-flowmeasurements of tree water use, with measurements made across a chronosequence of three sites (24, 80 and 296 years since fire). At the 296-year old site eddy covariance systems were installed above the E. regnans overstorey and above the distinct rainforest understorey. Contrary to predictions from the Kuczera curve, we found that measurements of whole-forest ET decreased by far less across stand age between 24 and 296 years. Although the overstorey tree water use declined by 1.8 mm day-1 with increasing forest age (an annual decrease of 657 mm) the understorey ET contributed between 1.2 and 1.5 mm day-1, 45% of the total ET (3 mm day-1) at the old growth forest. 

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)483-492
    Number of pages10
    JournalFunctional Plant Biology
    Volume35
    Issue number6
    Publication statusPublished - 2008

    Keywords

    • eddy covariance
    • Eucalyptus regnans
    • sap flow
    • transpiration

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