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What We Know About Stemflow's Infiltration Area
by
Van Stan, John T.
, Allen, Scott T.
in
forest
/ Forests
/ funneling ratio
/ infiltration
/ Infiltration rate
/ Isotopes
/ Precipitation
/ precipitation partitioning
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Soil conductivity
/ Soil surfaces
/ Soils
/ Stable isotopes
/ stemflow
/ Stems
/ Storms
2020
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What We Know About Stemflow's Infiltration Area
by
Van Stan, John T.
, Allen, Scott T.
in
forest
/ Forests
/ funneling ratio
/ infiltration
/ Infiltration rate
/ Isotopes
/ Precipitation
/ precipitation partitioning
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Soil conductivity
/ Soil surfaces
/ Soils
/ Stable isotopes
/ stemflow
/ Stems
/ Storms
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
What We Know About Stemflow's Infiltration Area
by
Van Stan, John T.
, Allen, Scott T.
in
forest
/ Forests
/ funneling ratio
/ infiltration
/ Infiltration rate
/ Isotopes
/ Precipitation
/ precipitation partitioning
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Soil conductivity
/ Soil surfaces
/ Soils
/ Stable isotopes
/ stemflow
/ Stems
/ Storms
2020
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Journal Article
What We Know About Stemflow's Infiltration Area
2020
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Overview
A portion of precipitation drains to the surface down plant stems, as “stemflow.” Although per observations to date, stemflow rarely represents >2% of gross precipitation in forests, it can result in larger water fluxes to near-stem soils that are hypothetically more important to roots. The ecohydrological importance of stemflow is often predicated upon assumptions about how it infiltrates into near-stem soils. Our objective is to review the small number of studies over the ~140 years of stemflow research that have quantified its infiltration area (i.e., soil surface area over which stemflow spreads while infiltrating). We found several empirical descriptions of stemflow infiltration areas inferred from disparate approaches, and we discuss that evidence in the context of dominant assumptions and conceptualizations (i.e., equating infiltration area to basal area or estimations based on assumed soil conductivity metrics). However, we conclude that a more empirical understanding of stemflow infiltration is needed before we quantify or qualify stemflow's influence from its assumed infiltration rate. Toward this goal, we provide a critical discussion of two methods (stable isotopes and dye tracing) that seem most promising for quantifying stemflow infiltration area.
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