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David Stone, IPILPS Workshop

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Title: David Stone, IPILPS Workshop


1
Diurnal Cycle Observations of Stable Water
Isotopes in the Biosphere
  • David Stone, IPILPS Workshop
  • ANSTO 18-22 April 2005

2
IPILPS isotopes at the land surface
  • Scientific Hypothesis
  • Observation and analysis of the diurnal fluxes of
    H218O and HDO between the soil, plants and
    atmosphere can accurately determine the
    partitioning of precipitation into transpiration,
    evaporation and total runoff.
  • Method
  • Three ecosystems were selected as study areas
  • Tropical forest, such as the Amazon Basin, Sth
    America
  • Cool, humid temperate forest, such as Central
    Europe, or Nth America
  • Warm, dry temperate forest, such as SE Australia
  • Exploit stable water isotopes H218O and HDO to
    investigate the hypothesis.
  • Observations would be required at Tumbarumba
  • Field data expected to be available for the
    Amazon, Europe and America

3
IPILPS Stable Isotope data needs
  • Data expected to be available include
  • precipitation
  • atmospheric vapour
  • plant (stem and leaf) water
  • soilwater
  • groundwater ( not expected to vary significantly)
  • riverwater
  • The data will be used within IPILPS to evaluate
    isotope enabled LSS output

4
Overview of presentation
  • Expected ranges of values
  • the precipitation input at the three ecosystems
  • vapourltstemltleaf order of enrichment
  • Data sets examined
  • Amazon Manaus, Santarem and Trinidad
  • Central Europe Munich, other German sites
  • North America temperate and semi-arid
  • others

5
Variation in del 18O ()
Leafwater 3 to10
THE WATER CYCLE
6
Expected isotope ratios for SE Australia
(Tumbarumba)
Leaves
GMWL
rainwater
Surface water
Root zone water stem water transpired water
9-10
Surface evaporate
LEL
Local vapour
9-10
7
10 depletion
Mean rainfall
8
Precipitation Input Signal 3 sites
9
Munich Vapour and Precipitation
Vapour and precipitation lie along a single MWL
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
10
Munich vapour/precipitation equilibrium
Regression r2 0.7 Delta 18O(p-v) 8.5
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
11
IPILPS data requirements and sources
  • Water isotopologues
  • del H218O and 1H2H16O () both desired
  • Comparison of LSS
  • By output, and against real data
  • Real field data required at appropriate time
    scales, monthly, daily, hourly
  • Prefer data at diurnal timescale
  • BASIN database (Ehleringer), Americas
  • CarboEuroflux (various), Europe

12
Data collection methods
  • Towers fitted with tubing for cryogenic vapour
    trapping, water kept frozen
  • Soil and Leaf samples sealed in exetainers
    distilled cryogenically before analysis
  • del D and del O-18 performed by IR-MS

13
Tropical Rainforest data Manaus, Amazon
Trinidad
LBA BASIN sites
Manaus
Santarem
14
data source Matsui et al,1983, Acta Amazonica,
13, 307-68
10 enrichment
15
am
pm
Enrichment increases during day
10.4 average enrichment
Data source LBAdatabase (Ometto) submitted for
publication
Canopy Leaves enriched
11
Understory Leaves less enriched
9
16
11
9
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
Dry season vapour, leaf and stem water more
enriched
11
7
17
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
12- 14
Inter-annual differences possible?
6
11
Much less leaf enrichment than in previous year
18
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
10- 12
8
8
19
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
10- 13
10
Dry season vapour, leaf and stem water more
enriched
9
Much less leaf enrichment than in previous year
5
20
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
Vapour less enriched mid-morning, but more
enriched in afternoon
5 difference in canopy
12
8
21
Vapour more enriched midday, but less enriched in
afternoon
5-10 difference in canopy
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
small difference between vapour and stems!!
12
8
22
Amazon Forest Vapour daytime variation, June 2000
Data source LBA (Ometto) unpublished
Vapour less enriched mid-morning, but more
enriched in afternoon
Vapour more enriched midday, but less enriched in
afternoon
23
Amazon Forest Vapour Keeling Plot analysis, June
1995
Data source Leo Sternberg, IAEA 2004
24
Amazon Forest Vapour Keeling Plot analysis, May -
Dec 1995
Data source Leo Sternberg, IAEA 2004
25
Average precip, calc
26
Conclusions
  • Amazon
  • Leaf enrichment increases during day
  • Canopy Leaves enriched, understory much less so
  • Stem water enriches slightly in dry season
  • Dry season vapour, leaf stem water more
    enriched
  • VapourltStemltLeaf enrichment close to optimum
  • Keeling plot analysis, 18O, indicates
    transpiration predominant flux of return vapour
    to atmosphere

27
Cool Temperate Munich, Germany
Jena and Dresden
CarboEuroFlux sites
28
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
29
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
30
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
31
Munich Vapour and Precipitation
data source W. Stichler, unpublished
32
Samples taken in evening 1900-2300
Leaf water depletes overnight
Stem and soilwater little variation
33
Leaf water depletes summer to winter
Stem and soilwater show little variation
34
Leaf water depletes summer to winter
Stem and soilwater show little variation
35
Cool Temperate Ottawa and Oregon
BASIN sites
Ottawa
Oregon sites
Oklahoma
Arizona
36
10 enrichment
data source Flanagan, L.B. and Varney, G.T.
1995, Oecologia 10137-44
37
Leafwater enriched during daytime
10 enrichment
Average precip, calc
38
Average precip, calc
39
Shallow soilwater
deeper soilwater
Average precip, calc
40
13 enrichment
Average precip, calc
41
Conclusions
  • Europe
  • Leaf enrichment decreases during evening (6-11pm)
  • Stem, roots, soil and litter show small
    variations, but little systematic seasonal change
  • VapourltStemltLeaf enrichment less than optimum
  • Humid North America
  • Soilwater data have a large variation
  • Forest stemltleaf enrichment at optimum
  • Grassland stemltleaf enrichment at optimum
  • Forest and Grassland vapourltstem enrichment less
    than optimum ( Summer data only available)

42
Warm Temperate - semi arid regions
Israel, Arizona
43
Average precip
44
Depletion during daytime
45
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46
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47
GMWL
LEL
48
Conclusions
  • Semi-arid Israel and North America
  • Israel vapourltstemltleaf enrichment at optimum
  • Arizona vapour became depleted during the day
  • Keeling plot analysis, using both 2H and 18O
    indicates transpiration predominant flux of
    return vapour to atmosphere

49
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50
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