Pg. Slavich et al., Dynamics of Eucalyptus largiflorens growth and water use in response to modified watertable and flooding regimes on a saline floodplain, AGR WATER M, 39(2-3), 1999, pp. 245-264
Reduced flooding and raised watertables have caused increased soil salinity
and die-back of native forests on the floodplains of the lower River Murra
y of south Australia. Proposed management options include increasing flood
frequency by regulating flows from upstream storages, and groundwater pumpi
ng to lower the watertable. This paper uses a soil-vegetation-atmosphere-tr
ansfer model (WAVES) to evaluate the impact of these proposals on soil sali
nisation processes and vegetation growth (black box, Eucalyptus largifloren
s) for soils with different hydraulic properties. The changes in canopy lea
f mass and plant available soil water were simulated for the period 1970-19
94 using historical daily climate and river level records. The river level
records were used to reconstruct the flooding and watertable history of sit
es where tree water use studies were conducted to calibrate the model. Then
the watertable depth and/or flooding frequency was modified and the change
s in the canopy leaf mass and soil water availability relative to the histo
rical simulation were evaluated. The simulations suggest that, with the pre
sent watertable and flooding regime, very large floods (e.g. 205 days as in
1974-1976) are needed to sustain tree cover on the higher parts of the flo
odplain where die-back is most severe. They also indicate that soil hydraul
ic properties have a large influence on the magnitude and time scale of the
growth response of salt stressed vegetation to floods and salt accumulatio
n. Infrequently flooded vegetation exhibiting die-back was predicted to inc
rease its canopy leaf area for up to 12 years following the large floods of
1974 and 1976, at sites where the soil was relatively permeable and ground
water highly saline (EC = 55 dS m(-1)). The changes in canopy leaf area in
response to the floods was predicted to be relatively small on sites with h
eavier clay soils. The growth response of the vegetation to a long term low
ering of watertable depth by 1 m was greater than that induced by the small
potential increase in flooding frequency which is feasible given the curre
nt water storage limitations. The simulations predict that changes in the a
verage annual soil water availability which arise from flood events and soi
l salinisation, drive a long term cycle in the annual average transpiration
rate per unit leaf area suggesting the sail-plant-climate system is adjust
ing towards a hydrological equilibrium but is not in equilibrium. The propo
sed management options may control die-back in parts of the floodplain with
more slowly salinising heavy clay soils and lower salinity groundwater but
are unlikely to prevent die-back on relatively permeable soils with high s
alinity groundwater. However, they may assist vegetation survival between t
he long duration flood events which appear to be essential to sustain tree
cover on the higher floodplain. The management options need to be evaluated
further at the floodplain scale using the understanding from site specific
conditions to test simple approaches which can be linked to a geographic i
nformation system (GIS) of the floodplain. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. A
ll rights reserved.