The .sup.18O ecohydrology of a grassland ecosystem - predictions and observations

The oxygen isotope composition ([delta].sup.18 O) of leaf water ([delta].sup.18 O.sub.leaf) is an important determinant of environmental and physiological information found in biological archives, but the system-scale understanding of the propagation of the [delta].sup.18 O of rain through soil and...

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Published inHydrology and earth system sciences Vol. 23; no. 6; pp. 2581 - 5161
Main Authors Hirl, Regina T, Schnyder, Hans, Ostler, Ulrike, Schäufele, Rudi, Schleip, Inga, Vetter, Sylvia H, Auerswald, Karl, Baca Cabrera, Juan C, Wingate, Lisa, Barbour, Margaret M, Ogée, Jérôme
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Copernicus GmbH 14.06.2019
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Summary:The oxygen isotope composition ([delta].sup.18 O) of leaf water ([delta].sup.18 O.sub.leaf) is an important determinant of environmental and physiological information found in biological archives, but the system-scale understanding of the propagation of the [delta].sup.18 O of rain through soil and xylem water to [delta].sup.18 O.sub.leaf has not been verified for grassland. Here we report a unique and comprehensive dataset of fortnightly [delta].sup.18 O observations in soil, stem and leaf waters made over seven growing seasons in a temperate, drought-prone, mixed-species grassland. Using the ecohydrology part of a physically based, .sup.18 O-enabled soil-plant-atmosphere transfer model (MuSICA), we evaluated our ability to predict the dynamics of [delta].sup.18 O in soil water, the depth of water uptake, and the effects of soil and atmospheric moisture on .sup.18 O enrichment of leaf water (Δ.sup.18 O.sub.leaf) in this ecosystem. The model accurately predicted the [delta].sup.18 O dynamics of the different ecosystem water pools, suggesting that the model generated realistic predictions of the vertical distribution of soil water and root water uptake dynamics. Observations and model predictions indicated that water uptake occurred predominantly from shallow (20 cm) soil depths throughout dry and wet periods in all years, presumably due (at least in part) to the effects of high grazing pressure on root system turnover and placement. Δ.sup.18 O.sub.leaf responded to both soil and atmospheric moisture contents and was best described in terms of constant proportions of unenriched and evaporatively enriched water (two-pool model). The good agreement between model predictions and observations is remarkable as model parameters describing the relevant physical features or functional relationships of soil and vegetation were held constant with one single value for the entire mixed-species ecosystem.
ISSN:1027-5606
1607-7938