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Investigating the Effects of Land Use Change on Subsurface, Surface and Atmospheric Branches of the Hydrologic Cycle in central Argentina
Resumen
Since the 1970s, land cover in central Argentina has shifted away from perennial crops and grasses towards annual crops, largely soy. In this work we use observations and modeling to understand how this shift in land use has affected the sub-surface, surface and atmospheric fluxes of moisture and energy in a flat agricultural area. We analyze the flux tower data from a paired site at Marcos Juarez in central Argentina during the period of the RELAMPAGO
[ver mas...]
Since the 1970s, land cover in central Argentina has shifted away from perennial crops and grasses towards annual crops, largely soy. In this work we use observations and modeling to understand how this shift in land use has affected the sub-surface, surface and atmospheric fluxes of moisture and energy in a flat agricultural area. We analyze the flux tower data from a paired site at Marcos Juarez in central Argentina during the period of the RELAMPAGO field campaign (2018-2019). When compared to perennial alfalfa, the observations over soy show lower evapotranspiration and specific humidity, higher sensible heat, higher outgoing shortwave radiation and soil temperature. Water table depth is shallower below the soy than the alfalfa sites. To better understand the long-term temporal behavior from 1970s to present, the Budyko framework is used to show that the trends in evapotranspiration cannot be explained by climate variables alone. We then use the Noah-MP land surface model calibrated at both soy and alfalfa sites. Long-term simulation of the calibrated model suggests that ∼95% of precipitation is evaporated in the alfalfa site with negligible recharge and runoff. In the case of soy, ET is about 68% of precipitation, leaving nearly 28% for recharge and 4% for runoff. Observed increases in streamflow and decreases in water table depth over time are likely linked to shifts in land cover. Furthermore, the partitioning of net radiation shifts from latent heat to sensible heat resulting in a 250% increase in Bowen ratio (from 0.2 to 0.7).
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Autor
Pal, Sujan;
Dominguez, Francina;
Bollatti, Pablo Adulve;
Oncley, Steven;
Yi, Yang;
Alvarez, Javier;
Garcia, Carlos Marcelo;
Fuente
Water Resources Research (First published: 20 October 2021)
Fecha
2021-10
Editorial
Wiley
ISSN
0043-1397
1944-7973
1944-7973
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Embargado
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)