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Vegetation induced changes in the stable isotope composition of near surface humidity

Literature Reference
Peer Reviewed Literature
Authors

Simonin, K. A., Link, P., Rempe, D., Miller, S., Oshun, J., Bode, C., Dietrich, W. E., Fung, I., and Dawson, T.E.

Presented at
Abstract

Obtaining the d-excess parameter from the oxygen (O) and hydrogen (H) stable isotope composition of meteoric waters has the potential power to reconstruct changes in atmospheric water pools (e,g, sources, origins and overall balance) and the climatic conditions that prevail during surface evaporation. Only recently have plant and ecosystem scientists turned their attention to using d-excess information to inform questions at these scales. Here we use the d-excess parameter to evaluate the influence of forest canopies on atmospheric humidity within a mixed evergreen forest in coastal California. We found that during the day, when transpiration was at a maximum, the d-excess of atmospheric water vapor exceeded model predictions for the background atmosphere into which the ecosystem evapotranspiration mixes. At night when transpiration was minor the d-excess of atmospheric water vapor was on average less than model predictions for an ocean derived water vapor source. The observed diurnal fluctuations around the d-excess of the modeled background water vapor provided strong evidence that during the day as the land surface warms and the boundary layer grows plants alter the isotope composition of atmospheric humidity via non steady-state isotope effects. In contrast, at night equilibrium isotope effects dominate as the atmosphere stabilizes. These day and nighttime fluctuations around the d-excess of ocean derived water vapor highlight the importance of plant transpiration for the isotope hydrology of near surface humidity and subsequently for the isotope composition of condensate like dew, an important water input to this ecosystem.