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  4. Tracing and Closing the Water Balance in a Vegetated Lysimeter
 
research article

Tracing and Closing the Water Balance in a Vegetated Lysimeter

Benettin, Paolo  
•
Nehemy, Magali F.
•
Asadollahi, Mitra  
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April 1, 2021
Water Resources Research

Closure of the soil water balance is fundamental to ecohydrology. But closing the soil water balance with hydrometric information offers no insight into the age distribution of water transiting the soil column via deep drainage or the combination of soil evaporation and transpiration. This is a major challenge in our discipline currently; tracing the water balance is the needed next step. Here we report results from a controlled tracer experiment aimed at both closing the soil water balance and tracing its individual components. This was carried out on a 2.5 m(3) lysimeter planted with a willow tree. We applied 25 mm of isotopically enriched water on top of the lysimeter and tracked it for 43 days through the soil water, the bottom drainage, and the plant xylem. We then destructively sampled the system to quantify the remaining isotope mass. More than 900 water samples were collected for stable isotope analysis to trace the labeled irrigation. We then used these data to quantify when and where the labeled irrigation became the source of plant uptake or deep percolation. Evapotranspiration dominated the water balance outflow (88%). Tracing the transpiration flux showed further that transpiration was soil water that had fallen as precipitation 1-2 months prior. The tracer breakthrough in transpiration was complex and different from the breakthrough curves observed within the soil or in the bottom drainage. Given the lack of direct experimental data on travel time to transpiration, these results provide a first balance closure where all the relevant outflows are traced.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2020WR029049
Web of Science ID

WOS:000644063800052

Author(s)
Benettin, Paolo  
Nehemy, Magali F.
Asadollahi, Mitra  
Pratt, Dyan
Bensimon, Michael  
McDonnell, Jeffrey J.
Rinaldo, Andrea  
Date Issued

2021-04-01

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

57

Issue

4

Article Number

e2020WR029049

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

•

Limnology

•

Water Resources

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

Marine & Freshwater Biology

•

soil column

•

tracer

•

transpiration

•

water age

•

willow

•

plant water

•

soil-water

•

stable-isotopes

•

residence times

•

hydraulic lift

•

transit times

•

wood density

•

evapotranspiration

•

dynamics

•

storage

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GR-CEL  
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
June 5, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/178615
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