ABSTRACT
Climatic conditions in temperate montane forests vary over multiple temporal scales. This study examines the effects of inter-annual climatic variability on the long-term water balance of a small headwater catchment with gradually changing vegetation characteristics. The research is based on direct observations of basic hydrological variables (precipitation, stream discharge), and process-based modelling of difficult-to-measure variables (forest transpiration, wet canopy evaporation, snow sublimation). The catchment water balance is evaluated in terms of the catchment water storage. The uncertainty of the estimated storage changes is expressed as a convolution of partial uncertainties associated with the individual components of catchment water balance. The results suggest a significant decrease of catchment water storage over the study period. The decrease is assumed to be caused by increasing winter temperatures, resulting in a more frequent occurrence of liquid precipitation and less prominent spring snowmelt. Considering vegetation’s conservative water-balance management proved essential for the studied environment.
Editor A. Fiori; Associate Editor D. Penna
Editor A. Fiori; Associate Editor D. Penna
Acknowledgements
The research was funded by the Czech Science Foundation, project No. 20-00788S, with the contribution of the Student Grant Competition programme of the Czech Technical University in Prague, grant no. SGS22/044/OHK1/1T/11.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.