Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua

Land conversion in the tropics from primary forest to agricultural land has altered soil hydrologic processes. Woody vegetation is known to increase infiltration rates and saturated hydraulic conductivity (KS) in primary forests compared with agricultural land, but it is less clear if this relations...

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Autores principales: Niemeyer, R.J., Fremier, Alexander K., Heinse, R., Chavez, W., DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66088
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author Niemeyer, R.J.
Fremier, Alexander K.
Heinse, R.
Chavez, W.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
author_browse Chavez, W.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Fremier, Alexander K.
Heinse, R.
Niemeyer, R.J.
author_facet Niemeyer, R.J.
Fremier, Alexander K.
Heinse, R.
Chavez, W.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
author_sort Niemeyer, R.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Land conversion in the tropics from primary forest to agricultural land has altered soil hydrologic processes. Woody vegetation is known to increase infiltration rates and saturated hydraulic conductivity (KS) in primary forests compared with agricultural land, but it is less clear if this relationship holds for a gradient of woody vegetation. In addition, the mechanisms for the effect of woody vegetation on KS have yet to be fully examined. To quantify the effect of woody vegetation structure on vadose zone hydrology, we estimated KS in 15 plots across a dry tropical riparian vegetation gradient in Nicaragua, taking into account covariates such as soil properties and livestock impact. Using single linear regression, we found that leaf area index (LAI) had the greatest correlation coefficient of 0.331 to KS, followed by hoofprint density (0.291) and clay content (0.291). Furthermore, the relationship between LAI and KS was greater for finer soils than for coarser soils. We found that a forest soil had eight times more preferential flow paths than a pasture soil, and most of these were root‐initiated flow paths, suggesting a possible mechanism for the positive correlation between LAI and KS. We show that the KS predictions with a pedotransfer function could be improved by incorporating LAI. Our findings support the importance of preserving woody vegetation in key areas on the landscape to maintain hydrologic functions of tropical soils and ecosystems.
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spelling CGSpace660882025-11-12T05:45:42Z Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua Niemeyer, R.J. Fremier, Alexander K. Heinse, R. Chavez, W. DeClerck, Fabrice A.J. forest soils hydraulic systems infiltration leaf area index livestock soil vegetation woody plants Land conversion in the tropics from primary forest to agricultural land has altered soil hydrologic processes. Woody vegetation is known to increase infiltration rates and saturated hydraulic conductivity (KS) in primary forests compared with agricultural land, but it is less clear if this relationship holds for a gradient of woody vegetation. In addition, the mechanisms for the effect of woody vegetation on KS have yet to be fully examined. To quantify the effect of woody vegetation structure on vadose zone hydrology, we estimated KS in 15 plots across a dry tropical riparian vegetation gradient in Nicaragua, taking into account covariates such as soil properties and livestock impact. Using single linear regression, we found that leaf area index (LAI) had the greatest correlation coefficient of 0.331 to KS, followed by hoofprint density (0.291) and clay content (0.291). Furthermore, the relationship between LAI and KS was greater for finer soils than for coarser soils. We found that a forest soil had eight times more preferential flow paths than a pasture soil, and most of these were root‐initiated flow paths, suggesting a possible mechanism for the positive correlation between LAI and KS. We show that the KS predictions with a pedotransfer function could be improved by incorporating LAI. Our findings support the importance of preserving woody vegetation in key areas on the landscape to maintain hydrologic functions of tropical soils and ecosystems. 2014-01 2015-05-13T14:00:07Z 2015-05-13T14:00:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66088 en Limited Access application/pdf Wiley Niemeyer, R.J.; Fremier, A.K.; Heinse, R.; Chavez, W.; DeClerck, F.A.J. -2014-Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua-Vadose Zone Journal 13(1)-
spellingShingle forest soils
hydraulic systems
infiltration
leaf area index
livestock
soil
vegetation
woody plants
Niemeyer, R.J.
Fremier, Alexander K.
Heinse, R.
Chavez, W.
DeClerck, Fabrice A.J.
Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title_full Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title_fullStr Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title_full_unstemmed Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title_short Woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical Nicaragua
title_sort woody vegetation increases saturated hydraulic conductivity in dry tropical nicaragua
topic forest soils
hydraulic systems
infiltration
leaf area index
livestock
soil
vegetation
woody plants
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66088
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