Interannual controls on riparian plant health in a dryland river

IF 2.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Ecohydrology Pub Date : 2024-01-05 DOI:10.1002/eco.2613
Peter W. Downs, Adam M. Lambert, Jared Williams, Charles A. Braman
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Abstract

Riparian zones in drylands provide important refugia for plants but depend on groundwater and thus are subject to local temporal and spatial variability in abiotic controls. In lieu of costly field-based sampling, we used readily available data to establish site–scale interannual relationships among riparian plant health and the abiotic factors that control their water balance for a historically persistent wetland adjoining the Santa Clara River in southern California, USA. Non-linear generalized additive model (GAM) analysis of plant health, represented using the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), confirmed robust relationships among plant health and various geomorphological and hydrological factors over multi-decadal timeframes, including years since last high-flow event, intra-year groundwater elevation changes and magnitude of 2-year cumulative surface water inflows. Geomorphic controls are related to years with high flows that cause extensive scour and deposition that re-set riparian plant communities. Relationships with dry-season groundwater declines reflect direct plant access to sub-surface moisture. Hydrological dependence via cumulative inflow magnitude indicates the dependency of groundwater elevations on sufficient winter recharge to prevent precipitous groundwater decline. GAMs-based inflection point analysis of surface water inflows versus groundwater elevations confirmed that the cumulative magnitude of multi-year inflows is critical in avoiding catastrophic groundwater declines and that large flood events drive groundwater recovery. We show that abiotic controls on plant health can be derived from readily available data and that non-linear analysis better represents the complexity of these scalar controls. Our analysis has relevance for ecosystem management of human-altered rivers and climate change adaptation.

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旱地河流河岸植物健康的年际控制
干旱地区的河岸带为植物提供了重要的栖息地,但依赖于地下水,因此受到当地非生物控制的时空变化的影响。为了代替昂贵的实地采样,我们利用现成的数据建立了河岸植物健康与控制其水分平衡的非生物因素之间的现场尺度年际关系,该湿地毗邻美国加利福尼亚州南部的圣克拉拉河。利用归一化差异植被指数(NDVI)对植物健康进行的非线性广义相加模型(GAM)分析证实,在十年以上的时间范围内,植物健康与各种地貌和水文因素之间存在密切的关系,这些因素包括自上次高流量事件以来的年份、年内地下水位的变化以及两年累计地表水流入量的大小。地貌控制与大流量年份有关,大流量年份会造成大面积冲刷和沉积,从而重新形成河岸植物群落。与旱季地下水减少的关系反映了植物对地表下水分的直接获取。通过累积流入量大小的水文依赖性表明,地下水位的高低取决于冬季是否有足够的补给,以防止地下水急剧下降。基于 GAMs 的地表水流入量与地下水高程的拐点分析证实,多年流入量的累积量对于避免地下水的灾难性下降至关重要,而大洪水事件则会推动地下水的恢复。我们表明,对植物健康的非生物控制可以从现成的数据中得出,而非线性分析能更好地体现这些标量控制的复杂性。我们的分析对人类改变河流的生态系统管理和气候变化适应具有现实意义。
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来源期刊
Ecohydrology
Ecohydrology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
7.70%
发文量
116
审稿时长
24 months
期刊介绍: Ecohydrology is an international journal publishing original scientific and review papers that aim to improve understanding of processes at the interface between ecology and hydrology and associated applications related to environmental management. Ecohydrology seeks to increase interdisciplinary insights by placing particular emphasis on interactions and associated feedbacks in both space and time between ecological systems and the hydrological cycle. Research contributions are solicited from disciplines focusing on the physical, ecological, biological, biogeochemical, geomorphological, drainage basin, mathematical and methodological aspects of ecohydrology. Research in both terrestrial and aquatic systems is of interest provided it explicitly links ecological systems and the hydrologic cycle; research such as aquatic ecological, channel engineering, or ecological or hydrological modelling is less appropriate for the journal unless it specifically addresses the criteria above. Manuscripts describing individual case studies are of interest in cases where broader insights are discussed beyond site- and species-specific results.
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