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research article

Transpiration on the rebound in lowland Sumatra

Roell, A.
•
Niu, F.
•
Meijide, A.
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August 15, 2019
Agricultural And Forest Meteorology

Following large-scale conversion of rainforest, rubber and oil palm plantations dominate lowland Sumatra (Indonesia) and other parts of South East Asia today, with potentially far-reaching ecohydrological consequences. We assessed how such land-use change affects plant transpiration by sap flux measurements at 42 sites in selectively logged rainforests, agroforests and rubber and oil palm monoculture plantations in the lowlands of Sumatra. Site-to-site variability in stand-scale transpiration and tree-level water use were explained by stand structure, productivity, soil properties and plantation age. Along a land-use change trajectory forest rubber-oil palm, time-averaged transpiration decreases by 43 +/- 11% from forest to rubber monoculture plantations, but rebounds with conversion to smallholder oil palm plantations. We uncovered that particularly commercial, intensive oil palm cultivation leads to high transpiration (827 +/- 77 mm yr(-1)), substantially surpassing rates at our forest sites (589 +/- 52 mm yr(-1)). Compared to smallholder oil palm, land-use intensification leads to 1.7-times higher transpiration in commercial plantations. Combined with severe soil degradation, the high transpiration may cause periodical water scarcity for humans in oil palm-dominated landscapes. As oil palm is projected to further expand, severe shifts in water cycling after land-cover change and water scarcity due to land-use intensification may become more widespread.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.agrformet.2019.04.017
Web of Science ID

WOS:000471356600015

Author(s)
Roell, A.
Niu, F.
Meijide, A.
Ahongshangbam, J.
Ehbrecht, M.
Guillaume, T.
Gunawan, D.
Hardanto, A.
Hendrayanto
Hertel, D.
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Date Issued

2019-08-15

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV

Published in
Agricultural And Forest Meteorology
Volume

274

Start page

160

End page

171

Subjects

Agronomy

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Forestry

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Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

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Agriculture

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forest

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jungle rubber

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land-cover change

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land-use intensification

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oil palm

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tropics

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rubber plantation

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sap flux

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water use

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oil palm expansion

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water-use

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sap flow

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leaf-area

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environmental variables

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stand transpiration

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rubber plantations

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jambi province

•

trees

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
June 28, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/158640
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