Abstract The collection of fog droplets by vegetation is an important wet deposition process. It can, in fact, dominate the chemical and hydrological input to certain high elevation watersheds. However, measurements of fog deposition are rarely made and, where they do exist, comparisons of deposition rates in different locations have been hampered by the use of innumerable types of collection devices. A simple, inexpensive, 1-m2 fog collector that can produce measurements of the deposition of fog water to a vertical surface is described here. The collector has been used successfully in five countries to investigate the variation of fog deposition in complex terrain and to estimate the deposition to trees and to much larger fog collectors. It is proposed that it be employed widely as a standard to quantify the importance of fog deposition to forested high elevation areas and to measure the potential collection rates in denuded or desert mountain ranges. The standard fog collector costs about the same as a ...
CITATION STYLE
Schemenauer, R. S., & Cereceda, P. (1994). A Proposed Standard Fog Collector for Use in High-Elevation Regions. Journal of Applied Meteorology, 33(11), 1313–1322. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0450(1994)033<1313:apsfcf>2.0.co;2
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