Evaluating changes in catchment-scale evapotranspiration after 50%
thinning in a headwater catchment
Abstract
We examined changes in catchment-scale annual and seasonal
evapotranspiration after 50% strip thinning, using runoff data from
headwater catchments. The short-term water balance (STWB) method between
periods from 8 to 100 days was applied to the treated
(KT) and control (KC) catchments. The
estimated evapotranspiration during the pre- and post-thinning periods
were 840 and 910 and 780 and 860 mm/year in the catchments
KT and KC, respectively. According to a
paired catchment analysis of estimated evapotranspiration, monthly
evapotranspiration increased from 3 to 20 mm from June to December,
while it decreased from 7 to 31 mm from January to May. The estimated
annual and monthly evapotranspiration was compatible with the values
monitored in the plot-scale interception, canopy transpiration, and
ground surface evapotranspiration. Our findings showed that the
decreases in evapotranspiration due to 50% thinning were similar or
different in different methods of measurement when compared with
thinning in the other catchments around the world. The STWB model can
evaluate the effects of timber harvesting on changes in
evapotranspiration (ET), including the reproduction of seasonal patterns
of ET.