Responsive characteristics of soil water regimes to rainfall events in a boreal larch forest in China: Dynamic processes and decoupling effects

Investigating the soil water dynamics in relation to rainfall events is of great importance for enhancing our understanding of eco-hydrological processes and improving soil hydrological models. However, the lack of long-term, in-situ observational data and the neglect of soil moisture decoupling hav...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geoderma
Main Authors: Zhipeng Xu, Peng Hu, Xiuling Man, Liangliang Duan, Tijiu Cai
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1481
Subjects:
Q
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116741
https://doaj.org/article/02c63c81f9d446bd84a08f9a4a4410d2
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Summary:Investigating the soil water dynamics in relation to rainfall events is of great importance for enhancing our understanding of eco-hydrological processes and improving soil hydrological models. However, the lack of long-term, in-situ observational data and the neglect of soil moisture decoupling have hindered the study of dynamic responses in soil water regimes to rainfall events in China’s boreal forests with permafrost. This study utilized soil water content monitoring and rainfall observational data from the Xing’an larch (Larix gmenilii) forest in Northeast China during the growing seasons of 2015–2021 to evaluate the dynamic response of soil water regimes to rainfall events. The results show a significant increase in the decoupling strength between soil water and rainfall with increasing soil depth. The thresholds of rainfall amount (RA), duration (RD), and intensity (RI) for triggering soil wetting events also increased. Soil water dynamic processes exhibited inconsistent and complex patterns in response to the hierarchical effects of RA, RD, and RI along the vertical soil profile. However, the dominant controls on soil water dynamic responses to RA, RD, and RI varied depending on specific response metrics, such as the accumulated soil water content increments (ASMI), duration time (DT), and the mean slope of the soil wetting curve (Sm). Interestingly, the dominant factor for affecting response time (RT) changed from RI to RD as soil depths increased. Importantly, the decoupling of soil moisture led to a substantial reduction in the responsiveness of these metrics of subsurface soil water to rainfall, and the role of the decoupling effect diminished with increasing soil depths. These findings highlight the complexity of the dynamic response of soil water to rainfall events and provide new insights into the relationship between soil water dynamics and rainfall features through the introduction of the decoupling of soil moisture in boreal forests.