4.7 Article

2H isotopic flux partitioning of evapotranspiration over a grass field following a water pulse and subsequent dry down

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 2, Pages 1410-1432

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2013WR014333

Keywords

flux partitioning; isotopes; similarity theory; vegetation stress; deuterium

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF CAREER) [EAR-0847368, EAR-0645697]
  2. Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science (CUAHSI) Patherfinder Fellowship
  3. Princeton Environmental Institute
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [0847368] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The partitioning of surface vapor flux (F-ET) into evaporation (F-E) and transpiration (F-T) is theoretically possible because of distinct differences in end-member stable isotope composition. In this study, we combine high-frequency laser spectroscopy with eddy covariance techniques to critically evaluate isotope flux partitioning of F-ET over a grass field during a 15 day experiment. Following the application of a 30 mm water pulse, green grass coverage at the study site increased from 0 to 10% of ground surface area after 6 days and then began to senesce. Using isotope flux partitioning, transpiration increased as a fraction of total vapor flux from 0% to 40% during the green-up phase, after which this ratio decreased while exhibiting hysteresis with respect to green grass coverage. Daily daytime leaf-level gas exchange measurements compare well with daily isotope flux partitioning averages (RMSE=0.0018 g m(-2) s(-1)). Overall the average ratio of F-T to F-ET was 29%, where uncertainties in Keeling plot intercepts and transpiration composition resulted in an average of uncertainty of similar to 5% in our isotopic partitioning of F-ET. Flux-variance similarity partitioning was partially consistent with the isotope-based approach, with divergence occurring after rainfall and when the grass was stressed. Over the average diurnal cycle, local meteorological conditions, particularly net radiation and relative humidity, are shown to control partitioning. At longer time scales, green leaf area and available soil water control F-T/F-ET. Finally, we demonstrate the feasibility of combining isotope flux partitioning and flux-variance similarity theory to estimate water use efficiency at the landscape scale. Key Points Isotopic flux partitioning separates evaporation and transpiration from bulk flux Results compare well with scaled leaf-level observations and flux-variance similarity theory Results differ from flux-variance similarity theory during stressed periods

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