Analysis of growing season carbon and water fluxes of a subalpine
wetland in the Canadian Rocky Mountains: implications of shade on
ecosystem water use efficiency
Abstract
Mountain regions are an important regulator in the global water cycle
through their disproportionate water contribution. Often referred to as
the “Water Towers of the World”, mountains contribute 40 to 60% of
the world’s annual surface flow. Shade is a common feature in mountains,
where complex terrain cycles land surfaces in and out of shadows over
daily and seasonal scales. This study investigated turbulent water and
carbon dioxide fluxes over the snow-free period in a subalpine wetland
in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, from June 7th to September 10th, 2018.
Shading had a significant and substantial effect on water and carbon
fluxes at our site. Each hourly increase of shade per day reduced
evapotranspiration (ET) and gross primary production (GPP) by 0.42 mm
and 0.77 gCm-2, equivalent to 17% and 15% per day, respectively, over
the entire study period. However, during only peak growing season, when
leaves were fully out and mature, shade caused by the local complex
terrain, reduced ET and increased GPP, likely due to enhanced diffuse
radiation. The overall result was increased water use efficiency at the
site during periods of increased shading during the peak growing season.
In addition to incoming solar radiation (Rg), temporal variability in ET
was found to relate to temporal variability in soil temperature,
moisture and vapour pressure deficit. Shade impacted the curvature and
intercept of the nonlinear ET-Rg relationship at our site. In contrast,
temporal variability in GPP at our site was dependent largely on Rg
only. Our findings suggest that shaded subalpine wetlands can store
large volumes of water for late season runoff and are productive through
short growing seasons.