RUNOFF AND RUNON AREAS IN A PATTERNED CHENOPOD SHRUBLAND, ARID WESTERN NEW-SOUTH-WALES, AUSTRALIA - CHARACTERISTICS AND ORIGIN

Citation
Dl. Dunkerley et Kj. Brown, RUNOFF AND RUNON AREAS IN A PATTERNED CHENOPOD SHRUBLAND, ARID WESTERN NEW-SOUTH-WALES, AUSTRALIA - CHARACTERISTICS AND ORIGIN, Journal of arid environments, 30(1), 1995, pp. 41-55
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Ecology
ISSN journal
01401963
Volume
30
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
41 - 55
Database
ISI
SICI code
0140-1963(1995)30:1<41:RARAIA>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
Strongly developed vegetation banding in desert chenopod shrubland occ urs on hillslopes having gradients of as little as 0.5 degrees and dis plays a stepped microrelief of about 10 cm. Surface runoff is shed fro m the bare surfaces in rainstorms of as little as 4-5 mm, and infiltra tes readily within the vegetated bands. The banding thus functions as an efficient system for water redistribution, the landscape being divi ded into multiple bare runoff (water source) and vegetated runon (wate r sink) zones. Patterns of stone distribution across a study hillslope suggest that the vegetation banding is at least Holocene in age. The patterned shrublands thus represent an enduring component of this arid rangeland environment, and one whose unusual microhydrology should be preserved by informed management.