Land cover and management effects on water yield
Prior to 1980, hydrological research was focused on understanding the effects of forest management practices on streamflow, namely water yield. Extended droughts in the eastern US in the early 1960’s drove inquiry into water yield from forested watersheds, propelling studies investigating harvest and herbicide applications (Kochenderfer et al., 1990). Clearcutting experiments (WS 3, 6 and 7) were undertaken to advance understanding of energy and water budgets (Hornbeck et al., 1993; Tajchman et al., 1997). FEF research advanced understanding of the influence of species composition on water yield by documenting a significant reduction in streamflow following conversion of broadleaf temperate forest to Norway spruce (Adams et al., 2012) (Figure 2). More recent research focused on how climate change influences the water balance (Creed et al., 2014; Jones et al., 2012; Vadeboncoeur et al., 2018; Young et al., 2019); altered rates of evapotranspiration due to ecosystem acidification (Lanning et al., 2019), and other effects of air pollution on the water use efficiency of broadleaf deciduous species through dendroisotopic approaches (Mathias, 2020).
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