Abstract

The interception of precipitation by plant canopies can alter the amount and spatial distribution of water inputs to ecosystems. We asked whether canopy interception could locally augment water inputs to shrubs by their crowns funneling (freshwater) precipitation as stemflow to their bases, in a wetland where relict overstory trees are dying and persisting shrubs only grow on small hummocks that sit above mesohaline floodwaters. Precipitation, throughfall, and stemflow were measured across 69 events over a 15-months period in a salinity-degraded freshwater swamp in coastal South Carolina, United States. Evaporation of intercepted water from the overstory and shrub canopies reduced net precipitation (stemflow plus throughfall) across the site to 91% of gross (open) precipitation amounts. However, interception by the shrub layer resulted in increased routing of precipitation down the shrub stems to hummocks – this stemflow yielded depths that were over 14 times larger than that of gross precipitation across an area equal to the shrub stem cross-sectional areas. Through dimensional analysis, we inferred that stemflow resulted in local augmentation of net precipitation, with effective precipitation inputs to hummocks equaling 100–135% of gross precipitation. Given that these shrubs (wax myrtle, Morella cerifera) are sensitive to mesohaline salinities, our novel findings prompt the hypothesis that stemflow funneling is an ecophysiologically important mechanism that increases freshwater availability and facilitates shrub persistence in this otherwise stressful environment.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMicrotopographic high areas (e.g., hummocks) can serve as local refugia

  • In flooded wetlands, microtopographic high areas can serve as local refugia

  • We investigate how canopy interception affects precipitation inputs to a permanently flooded wetland where salinity intrusion has yielded an ecosystem composed of sparse relict trees with submerged roots (Williams et al, 2014) and midstory shrubs rooted on hummocks

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Summary

Introduction

Microtopographic high areas (e.g., hummocks) can serve as local refugia. Microtopographic highs can foster seed germination and seedling survival in environments where they would otherwise be excluded by flooding (Conner et al, 1986; Souther and Shaffer, 2000); this is especially true when floodwaters are saline (Rheinhardt and Faser, 2001) because salinity is often a critical physiological stressor to both juvenile and mature trees (Allen et al, 2019). Hummocks allow roots to avoid and sit above saline waters (Light et al, 2007). We examine the input of freshwater to hummocks, which can facilitate plants’ avoidance of saline conditions

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