Repositorio Institucional
Repositorio Institucional
CONICET Digital
  • Inicio
  • EXPLORAR
    • AUTORES
    • DISCIPLINAS
    • COMUNIDADES
  • Estadísticas
  • Novedades
    • Noticias
    • Boletines
  • Ayuda
    • General
    • Datos de investigación
  • Acerca de
    • CONICET Digital
    • Equipo
    • Red Federal
  • Contacto
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
  • INFORMACIÓN GENERAL
  • RESUMEN
  • ESTADISTICAS
 
Capítulo de Libro

Tree plantation in South America and the water cycle: Impacts and emergent opportunities

Título del libro: Forests in development: A vital balance

Jobbagy Gampel, Esteban GabrielIcon ; Baldi, GermánIcon ; Nosetto, Marcelo DanielIcon
Otros responsables: Schilichter, Tomás; Montes, Leopoldo
Fecha de publicación: 2012
Editorial: Springer
ISBN: 978-94-007-2575-1
Idioma: Inglés
Clasificación temática:
Silvicultura

Resumen

South American tree plantations expand at a rate of 5,000 km2/year favored by increasingly globalized markets and local economic conditions. The main hydrological impacts of these plantations involve shifts in (a) the partition of precipitation inputs between vapour vs. liquid fluxes (associated to transpiration and canopy interception shifts) and (b) the partition of liquid fluxes between run-off and fast flow vs. deep drainage and base flow (associated to infiltration and surface water routing shifts). In sloped terrains global stream flow measurements in paired watersheds indicate declining water yields (40% less on average) under plantations vs. native vegetation. These effects are stronger under drier climates, where host vegetation is herbaceous, and where planted trees are eucalypts. In flat landscapes with native grassland vegetation, tree plantations switch the water balance from positive (net recharge) to negative (net discharge) triggering local salinization. Contrastingly, where native vegetation has been a woodland tree plantation can remediate the undesirable recharge and water table rise/salinization problems brought by agriculture. In degraded rolling (sub)tropical landscapes with intense rainfall inputs and high run-off, tree plantations can increase infiltration rates, reducing erosion, stabilizing flow, but cutting total water yield. As a result of these shifts, erosion can be reduced and the stability and quality of water provision improved, yet these benefits can be erased by large scale clear cutting practices. Context (climate, current vegetation and topography/geology) and design (species, densities, harvesting methods, and scale/pattern) can decide the magnitude and sign of tree plantations effects and need to be carefully considered to get the best ecological outcome of afforestation in the continent.
Palabras clave: AFFORESTATION , HYDROLOGICAL REGULATION , WATER PROVISION , LANDSCAPE DESIGN , ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
Ver el registro completo
 
Archivos asociados
Tamaño: 176.0Kb
Formato: PDF
.
Solicitar
Licencia
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11336/207102
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2576-8_5
URL: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-007-2576-8_5
Colecciones
Capítulos de libros(IMASL)
Capítulos de libros de INST. DE MATEMATICA APLICADA DE SAN LUIS
Citación
Jobbagy Gampel, Esteban Gabriel; Baldi, Germán; Nosetto, Marcelo Daniel; Tree plantation in South America and the water cycle: Impacts and emergent opportunities; Springer; 2012; 53-63
Compartir
Altmétricas
 

Enviar por e-mail
Separar cada destinatario (hasta 5) con punto y coma.
  • Facebook
  • X Conicet Digital
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Sound Cloud
  • LinkedIn

Los contenidos del CONICET están licenciados bajo Creative Commons Reconocimiento 2.5 Argentina License

https://www.conicet.gov.ar/ - CONICET

Inicio

Explorar

  • Autores
  • Disciplinas
  • Comunidades

Estadísticas

Novedades

  • Noticias
  • Boletines

Ayuda

Acerca de

  • CONICET Digital
  • Equipo
  • Red Federal

Contacto

Godoy Cruz 2290 (C1425FQB) CABA – República Argentina – Tel: +5411 4899-5400 repositorio@conicet.gov.ar
TÉRMINOS Y CONDICIONES