Hydrological balance of a subalpine forest and the effects of fog presence and forest age
Hydrological balance of a subalpine forest and the effects of fog presence and forest age
Montagnani, L.; Garcia-Santos, G.; Obojes, N.
AbstractSubalpine forests in the Alps are fragile ecosystems that play a crucial role in regional water resources and the local climate. These ecosystems are ecologically significant due to their unique biodiversity and vulnerability to climate change. While several components of the hydrological balance have been studied, the interplay between catchment-scale processes and plot-scale drivers such as fog presence and forest age remains insufficiently understood. To address this, we investigated the hydrological balance of a subalpine coniferous forest catchment at the Renon site in the Italian Alps, integrating observations across spatial scales. The study area includes a mosaic of mature and younger regrowth forest, where both interannual and seasonal variability in precipitation and fog presence are pronounced. At the catchment scale, we quantified above-canopy precipitation, evapotranspiration (ET, measured via eddy covariance at the ICOS tower), stream discharge, and soil moisture dynamics. Within the catchment, we characterised water partitioning using sap flow sensors for tree transpiration, throughfall and stemflow collectors with rain gauges above and below the canopy and epiphyte sampling. Mixed fog-rain events frequently coincided with higher throughfall. However, these changes had a minor effect on soil water storage and catchment discharge in the annual water balance, which was nearly closed. At the plot scale, our results show that tree transpiration was higher in the younger forest structure, while canopy interception is a dominant process in water partitioning in the older forest structure, where lichen abundance likely enhances interception. This study highlights the importance of multi-scale monitoring in temperate mountain forests, where forest age influences water partitioning, and fog presence, though not directly quantified, can still contribute to reducing evaporative processes. Such contributions may gain importance under changing climate conditions, albeit less prominently than in tropical or subtropical cloud forests.