New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR)
Drylands are ecohydrologically-coupled ecosystems whose functioning depends on the interplay between hydrological connectivity between runoff source areas and the capacity of vegetation to retain water fluxes and associated resources. In this study we present a new easily applicable methodology for...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Sciendo
2023-06-01
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Series: | Journal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics |
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.2478/johh-2023-0012 |
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author | Rodríguez-Lozano Borja Martínez-Sánchez Juan Maza-Maza Jaime Cantón Yolanda Rodríguez-Caballero Emilio |
author_facet | Rodríguez-Lozano Borja Martínez-Sánchez Juan Maza-Maza Jaime Cantón Yolanda Rodríguez-Caballero Emilio |
author_sort | Rodríguez-Lozano Borja |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Drylands are ecohydrologically-coupled ecosystems whose functioning depends on the interplay between hydrological connectivity between runoff source areas and the capacity of vegetation to retain water fluxes and associated resources. In this study we present a new easily applicable methodology for the ecohydrological characterization of dryland ecosystem functioning grounded in the balance between these two strongly interrelated processes using easily obtainable remote sensing data (e.g. UAV and SENTINEL-2 images), the BalanCR method (Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity). This methodology was first tested on synthetic hillslopes representing different configurations of the patchy and heterogenic distribution of vegetation in drylands. The analysis of these synthetic vegetation spatial patterns involving different vegetation patch densities, sizes, and fractional coverage values showed that BalanCR properly characterizes the expected ecohydrological interactions between potential conditions of runoff connectivity and water retention by plants operating in drylands. In a second step, we applied the BalanCR method on four semiarid hillslopes along an altitudinal aridity gradient covered by Mediterranean alpha steppes at very detailed spatial resolution (0.2 m) and at medium resolution (10 m). The obtained results were validated based on soil moisture data and vegetation greening and clearly recognized the four study sites as functional ecosystems, with very low water resource losses, and a pattern of increasing water redistribution processes as vegetation coverage declines. However, the sensitivity of methodology depends on the resolution of the input data (vegetation map and Digital Elevation Model; DEM), and the expected positive effect of small vegetation structures (vegetation patches smaller than the pixel size) on water redistribution is underestimated. Even in this case, the functionality and connectivity of the analyzed sites is correctly characterized as ecosystems showed similar values of both components for the methodology BalanC (hydrological connectivity component) and BalanR (potential water retention capacity component) than those obtained at very detailed scale, with a similar pattern of water allocation values in response to increased aridity. Thus, the proposed metric represents a promising tool for the proper evaluation of dryland conditions and to incorporate hillslope processes in climate change models, which is one of the main gaps to better understand the drylands response upon ongoing climate change. |
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institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1338-4333 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-13T08:21:52Z |
publishDate | 2023-06-01 |
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series | Journal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics |
spelling | doaj.art-a58a7f38eb0a472cb620c15a5b5fb6d02023-05-31T07:00:34ZengSciendoJournal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics1338-43332023-06-0171218819810.2478/johh-2023-0012New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR)Rodríguez-Lozano Borja0Martínez-Sánchez Juan1Maza-Maza Jaime2Cantón Yolanda3Rodríguez-Caballero Emilio41Agronomy Department, University of Almería, 04120 Almería, Spain.1Agronomy Department, University of Almería, 04120 Almería, Spain.3Technical University of Machala, Q23M+RX7, Machala, Ecuador.1Agronomy Department, University of Almería, 04120 Almería, Spain.1Agronomy Department, University of Almería, 04120 Almería, Spain.Drylands are ecohydrologically-coupled ecosystems whose functioning depends on the interplay between hydrological connectivity between runoff source areas and the capacity of vegetation to retain water fluxes and associated resources. In this study we present a new easily applicable methodology for the ecohydrological characterization of dryland ecosystem functioning grounded in the balance between these two strongly interrelated processes using easily obtainable remote sensing data (e.g. UAV and SENTINEL-2 images), the BalanCR method (Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity). This methodology was first tested on synthetic hillslopes representing different configurations of the patchy and heterogenic distribution of vegetation in drylands. The analysis of these synthetic vegetation spatial patterns involving different vegetation patch densities, sizes, and fractional coverage values showed that BalanCR properly characterizes the expected ecohydrological interactions between potential conditions of runoff connectivity and water retention by plants operating in drylands. In a second step, we applied the BalanCR method on four semiarid hillslopes along an altitudinal aridity gradient covered by Mediterranean alpha steppes at very detailed spatial resolution (0.2 m) and at medium resolution (10 m). The obtained results were validated based on soil moisture data and vegetation greening and clearly recognized the four study sites as functional ecosystems, with very low water resource losses, and a pattern of increasing water redistribution processes as vegetation coverage declines. However, the sensitivity of methodology depends on the resolution of the input data (vegetation map and Digital Elevation Model; DEM), and the expected positive effect of small vegetation structures (vegetation patches smaller than the pixel size) on water redistribution is underestimated. Even in this case, the functionality and connectivity of the analyzed sites is correctly characterized as ecosystems showed similar values of both components for the methodology BalanC (hydrological connectivity component) and BalanR (potential water retention capacity component) than those obtained at very detailed scale, with a similar pattern of water allocation values in response to increased aridity. Thus, the proposed metric represents a promising tool for the proper evaluation of dryland conditions and to incorporate hillslope processes in climate change models, which is one of the main gaps to better understand the drylands response upon ongoing climate change.https://doi.org/10.2478/johh-2023-0012water redistributionsentinel-2uavdryland monitoringindexresource-leakiness feedbackssemiaridrunoffhydrologyvegetation spatial pattern |
spellingShingle | Rodríguez-Lozano Borja Martínez-Sánchez Juan Maza-Maza Jaime Cantón Yolanda Rodríguez-Caballero Emilio New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) Journal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics water redistribution sentinel-2 uav dryland monitoring index resource-leakiness feedbacks semiarid runoff hydrology vegetation spatial pattern |
title | New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) |
title_full | New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) |
title_fullStr | New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) |
title_full_unstemmed | New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) |
title_short | New methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of Balance between Connectivity and potential Water Retention Capacity (BalanCR) |
title_sort | new methodological approach to characterize dryland´s ecohydrological functionality on the basis of balance between connectivity and potential water retention capacity balancr |
topic | water redistribution sentinel-2 uav dryland monitoring index resource-leakiness feedbacks semiarid runoff hydrology vegetation spatial pattern |
url | https://doi.org/10.2478/johh-2023-0012 |
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