Impacts of ditch cleaning on hydrological processes in a drained peatland forest
نویسنده
چکیده
Papers published in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions are under open-access review for the journal Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Abstract Introduction Conclusions References Tables Figures ◭ ◮ ◭ ◮ Back Close Full Screen / Esc Printer-friendly Version Interactive Discussion EGU Abstract One fourth (5.5 Mha) of forests in Finland are growing on peatlands that have been drained to improve forest growth. Forestry operations such as cuttings and ditch network maintenance in these areas may increase export of suspended solids and nutrients , and deteriorate water quality in receiving lakes and rivers. Mitigation of the 5 deterioration calls for understanding how forest management operations affect peat-land hydrology. A process-based simulation model FEMMA was applied to quantify the effects of ditch network maintenance on peatland water balance. The model has separate computation routines for evapotranspiration in tree stand and understorey vegetation , snow accumulation and melt, water movement in unsaturated and saturated soil, 10 and drainage. Hydraulic characteristics of peat, as well as different drainage designs can be parameterised in the model. The model was applied in artificially delineated research catchments in northern Finland, where the ditch network was maintained by cleaning and digging the ditches deeper. The simulation results indicated that ditch cleaning affected the water balance slightly and the effect was dependent on stand 15 characteristics and soil structure. When the growing stock volume was low and poorly conductive soil extended close to the soil surface, ditch cleaning increased evapo-transpiration. In stands with a high stock volume and a thick topmost layer of highly conductive soil, evapotranspiration was less affected. In the study catchments, the effect of ditch cleaning on runoff was small compared to the error between measured 20 and modelled runoff.
منابع مشابه
Modeling Mortality of Individual Trees in Drained Peatland Sites in Finland
Multilevel logistic regression models were constructed to predict the 5-year mortality of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) and pubescent birch (Betula pubescens Ehrh.) growing in drained peatland stands in northern and central Finland. Data concerning tree mortality were obtained from two successive measurements of the National Forest Inventory-based permanent sample plot data base covering pur...
متن کاملThe Effect of Wider Logging Trails on Rut Formations in the Harvesting of Peatland Forests
Peatlands are very problematic from the bearing capacity point of view. Therefore, logging activities on peatlands in Finland are mainly carried out during the coldest weeks in winter time. More intensive utilisation of peatland forests requires logging activities to be increasingly carried out during unfrozen conditions. Multiple passages of a harvester and a loaded forwarder used for the tran...
متن کاملMacroscale Variation in Peat Element Concentrations in Drained Boreal Peatland Forests
Information on the variation in soil element concentrations at different spatial scales is needed for, e.g., designing efficient sampling strategies, upscaling the processes related to carbon cycling, and planning land use and management. In spite of intensive land use, such information concerning peat soils is still scarce. We analyzed the variation in peat mineral element concentrations in bo...
متن کاملSimulating the effects of spatial configurations of agricultural ditch drainage networks on surface runoff from agricultural catchments
networks on surface runoff from agricultural catchments Levavasseur F., Bailly J.S., Lagacherie P., Colin F., Rabotin M. a UMR 1221 LISAH F-34035, INRA, Montpellier, France. b UMR 1221 LISAH F-34035, AgroParisTech, Montpellier, France. c UMR TETIS F-34093, AgroParisTech, Montpellier, France. d UMR 1221 LISAH F-34035, Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France. Abstract The study of runoff is a cr...
متن کاملPeatland hydrology and carbon release: why small-scale process matters.
Peatlands cover over 400 million hectares of the Earth's surface and store between one-third and one-half of the world's soil carbon pool. The long-term ability of peatlands to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere means that they play a major role in moderating global climate. Peatlands can also either attenuate or accentuate flooding. Changing climate or management can alter peatland hydr...
متن کامل