4.3 Article

Evapotranspiration and plant-atmospheric coupling in a Brachiaria brizantha pasture in the Brazilian savannah region

Journal

GRASS AND FORAGE SCIENCE
Volume 66, Issue 2, Pages 206-213

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2494.2010.00777.x

Keywords

Brachiaria brizantha; Cerrado biome; eddy covariance; decoupling factor

Categories

Funding

  1. National Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq, Brazil)

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The savannah of central Brazil occupies 208 million ha, of which about 54 million ha have been converted to cultivated pasture. The aim of this study was to provide the dynamics of evapotranspiration (ET) in a Brachiaria brizantha cultivated pasture in the Brazilian Savannah region at the beginning of the rainy season and determine biological and environmental factors that influence ET by using the decoupling approach. A meteorological station and an eddy covariance system were placed at the studied site. The above-ground biomass production of the B. brizantha pasture responded rapidly to the onset of the rainy season. Leaf area index (LAI) increased from 0 center dot 4 to 1 center dot 1 between 15 November and 3 December, with a corresponding increase in live biomass. Average ET during the study period was 2 center dot 6 +/- 0 center dot 9 mm. Daily ET was significantly correlated with maximum vapour pressure deficit and precipitation. The average of daytime decoupling factor obtained over 2 d without rain was 0 center dot 50 +/- 0 center dot 06. The B. brizantha pasture deployed in this region showed an intermediate coupling which takes ET to be influenced by both atmospheric conditions and by the available radiation at the canopy.

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