Authors
Carlos E Oyarzún, Roberto Godoy, Jeroen Staelens, Pablo J Donoso, Niko EC Verhoest
Publication date
2011/2/15
Journal
Hydrological Processes
Volume
25
Issue
4
Pages
623-633
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Description
The partitioning of gross rainfall into throughfall, stemflow, and interception loss and their relationships with forest structure was studied for a period of four years (October 2002–September 2006) and two years (October 2005–September 2007) in seven experimental catchments of temperate rainforest ecosystems located in the Andes of south‐central Chile (39°37′S, 600–925 m a.s.l.). The amount of throughfall, stemflow, and interception loss was correlated with forest structure characteristics such as basal area, canopy cover, mean quadratic diameter (MQD), and tree species characteristics in evergreen and deciduous forests. Annual rainfall ranged from 4061 to 5308 mm at 815 m a.s.l. and from 3453 to 4660 mm at 714 m a.s.l. Throughfall ranged from 64 to 89% of gross rainfall. Stemflow contributed 0·3–3·4% of net precipitation. Interception losses ranged from 11 to 36% of gross rainfall and depended on the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CE Oyarzún, R Godoy, J Staelens, PJ Donoso… - Hydrological Processes, 2011