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Effects of changes in canopy interception on stream runoff response and recovery following clear-cutting of a Japanese coniferous forest in Fukuroyamasawa Experimental Watershed in Japan
Authors:Tomoki Oda  Tomohiro Egusa  Nobuhito Ohte  Norifumi Hotta  Nobuaki Tanaka  Mark B Green  Masakazu Suzuki
Institution:1. Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan;2. Department of Social Informatics, Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;3. Ecohydrology Research Institute, The University of Tokyo Forests, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Seto, Japan;4. Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Science, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Abstract:Understanding changes in evapotranspiration during forest regrowth is essential to predict changes of stream runoff and recovery after forest cutting. Canopy interception (Ic) is an important component of evapotranspiration, however Ic changes and the impact on stream runoff during regrowth after cutting remains unclear due to limited observations. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of Ic changes on long-term stream runoff in a regrowth Japanese cedar and Japanese cypress forest following clear-cutting. This study was conducted in two 1-ha paired headwater catchments at Fukuroyamasawa Experimental Watershed in Japan. The catchments were 100% covered by Japanese coniferous plantation forest, one of which was 100% clear-cut in 1999 when the forest was 70 years old. In the treated catchment, annual runoff increased by 301 mm/year (14% of precipitation) the year following clear-cutting, and remained 185 mm/year (7.9% of precipitation) higher in the young regrowth forest for 12–14 years compared to the estimated runoff assuming no clear-cutting. The Ic change was ?358 mm/year (17% of precipitation) after cutting and was ?168 mm/year (6.7% of precipitation) in the 12–14 years old regrowth forest compared to the observed Ic during the pre-cutting period. Stream runoff increased in all seasons, and the Ic change was the main fraction of evapotranspiration change in all seasons throughout the observation period. These results suggest that the change in Ic accounted for most of the runoff response following forest cutting and the subsequent runoff recovery in this coniferous forest.
Keywords:canopy interception  clear-cutting  coniferous forest  evapotranspiration  forest regrowth  paired catchment experiment  stream runoff  transpiration
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