RAINFALL INTERCEPTION BY A PINUS-SYLVESTRIS FOREST PATCH OVERGROWN INA MEDITERRANEAN MOUNTAINOUS ABANDONED AREA .1. MONITORING DESIGN AND RESULTS DOWN TO THE EVENT SCALE
P. Llorens et al., RAINFALL INTERCEPTION BY A PINUS-SYLVESTRIS FOREST PATCH OVERGROWN INA MEDITERRANEAN MOUNTAINOUS ABANDONED AREA .1. MONITORING DESIGN AND RESULTS DOWN TO THE EVENT SCALE, Journal of hydrology, 199(3-4), 1997, pp. 331-345
Monitoring (in 5 min steps) of precipitation, throughfall, stemflow an
d bulk canopy wetness, and also weather conditions and soil moisture,
was carried out from July 1993 to December 1995, in a Pinus sylvestris
forest patch located in a Mediterranean mountainous former agricultur
al basin subject to spontaneous change from pasture to forest. Through
fall collectors were designed to obtain hydrologically representative
data and they consist of nine troughs with a total catchment area of 9
m(2). The bulk interception rate measured after 30 months of monitori
ng was about 24%. Relative interception was irregular and decreased wi
th the magnitude of the event; it was at least 15% for events of more
than 20 mm. Multivariate analysis of the events demonstrates that thei
r characteristics can be simplified in two main factors which respecti
vely represent the duration of the event and its magnitude. The magnit
ude of the event biases the characterization because of the non-linear
ity of the rainfall-interception relationship. Long events do not prod
uce higher interception rates than shorter ones because of the occurre
nce of low vapour pressure deficits during the former. In atmospheric
dry conditions the rainfall intensity provides the main control on int
erception rates. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.