Interactions between leaf area index, canopy density and effective precipitation of a polylepis reticulata forest located in a paramo ecosystem

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Abstract

The measurement of vegetation cover is fundamental to quantify the precipitation percentage intercepted by it. The most widely techniques used to measure the cover in situ are the leaf area index (LAI) and the canopy density (CD). However, no attention has been paid to the differences recorded in the use of the two techniques or how these variables influence the hydrological balance on the throughfall (TF). For this reason, the objective of the study is to evaluate the relationship between vegetation cover measurements conducted by the LAI and CD methods and to identify how they relate with the TF, important for hydrological applications. The study was developed in a Polylepis reticulata forest of 15633 m2, located at the Zhurucay Ecohydrological Observatory, south of Ecuador, in an altitudinal range of 3765 to 3809 m.a.s.l. The LAI was measured with the CI-110 Plant Canopy Imager equipment and CD with a spherical densiometer, covering a wide range of canopy cover values. The study site was instrumented with 9 tipping-bucket rain gauges to measure TF. The results indicate that LAI and CD averages are 2.43 m2 m-2 y 88% respectively; whose relationship is significant (R2 = 0.913; p< 0.05). Mean annual TF is 773.2 mm, which tends to decrease with the increase of the LAI and CD; although, their relationship is not statistically significant (p-value> 0.05). This study shows the importance of characterizing the vegetation cover to understand the interaction with TF.

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Suqui, A., Célleri, R., Crespo, P., & Carrillo-Rojas, G. (2021). Interactions between leaf area index, canopy density and effective precipitation of a polylepis reticulata forest located in a paramo ecosystem. Granja, 34(2), 60–76. https://doi.org/10.17163/LGR.N34.2021.04

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