Interaction of climate, vegetation, and water age in catchments across
scales and climate zones
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated a direct relation between climate
characteristics and vegetation in catchments. For example, plants appear
to develop a root system that allows both optimal growth and resistance
against region-specific droughts (Gao et al., 2014; Ho et al., 2005). As
climatic conditions also affect the way catchments store and release
water (i.e., the transit times), we expect a direct relation between
vegetation and transit times. To test this hypothesis, we have
established a dataset of water balance and stable water isotope data
across more than 50 catchments in various climate zones, which will be
further expanded over the course of the project. This dataset allows for
determining root zone storage capacities and transit time metrics such
as the young water fraction (Kirchner, 2016) across catchment scales and
climate zones. We will present how transit time metrics vary as a
function of root zone storage capacities and how this can be related to
catchment and vegetation characteristics and climatic conditions. The
results will help understand how changing vegetation cover due to
climate and land use change might affect catchment water storage and
release in future. We see a vast potential of isotope studies across
diverse catchments. We are thus calling for a community effort to
provide streamflow isotope data from previous work in a unified
framework as a basis for further global analyses using stable water
isotopes. Gao, H.; Hrachowitz, M.; Schymanski, S. J.; Fenicia, F.;
Sriwongsitanon, N.; Savenije, H. H. G., Climate controls how ecosystems
size the root zone storage capacity at catchment scale. Geophysical
Research Letters 2014, 41, 7916–7923, doi:10.1002/2014GL061668. Ho, M.
D.; Rosas, J. C.; Brown, K. M.; Lynch, J. P., Root architectural
tradeoffs for water and phosphorus acquisition. Functional Plant Biology
2005, 32, (8), 737-748. Kirchner, J. W., Aggregation in environmental
systems – Part 1: Seasonal tracer cycles quantify young water
fractions, but not mean transit times, in spatially heterogeneous
catchments. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 2016, 20, (1), 279-297.