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Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective: Evapotranspiration

Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective: Evapotranspiration. Ali Fares, PhD Evaluation of Natural Resource Management, NREM 600 UHM-CTAHR-NREM. Explain and differentiate among the processes of evaporation from a water body, evaporation from soil, and transpiration from a plant

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Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective: Evapotranspiration

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  1. Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective:Evapotranspiration Ali Fares, PhD Evaluation of Natural Resource Management, NREM 600 UHM-CTAHR-NREM

  2. Explain and differentiate among the processes of evaporation from a water body, evaporation from soil, and transpiration from a plant Understand and be able to solve for evapotranspiration (ET) using a water budget & energy budget method Explain potential ET and actual ET relationships in the field. Under what conditions are they similar? Under what conditions are they different? Understand and explain how changes in vegetative cover affect ET. Describe methods used in estimating potential and actual ET Objectives of this chapter

  3. Conservation of Energy • The conservation equation as applied to energy, or conservation of energy, is known as the energy balance. • How precipitation is partitioned into infiltration, runoff, evapo-transpiration, etc., similarly, we can look at how incoming radiation from the sun and from the atmosphere is partitioned into different energy fluxes (where the term flux denotes a rate of transfer (e.g. of mass, energy or momentum) per unit area).

  4. Water & Energy relationship • There is strong link between the water and energy balance: • Partitioning of incoming radiation into the various fluxes of energy ( energy for ET, energy to heat the atmosphere and energy to heat the ground) depends on the water balance and how much water is present in soils and available for evapotranspiration. • the partitioning of precipitation into the various water fluxes (e.g. runoff and infiltration) depends on how much energy is available for ET. • Just as changes in water balance were reflected in changes in storage in water amounts (soil moisture in a root zone; level of a lake) changes in energy balance are reflected in temperature changes. • Just as we wrote water balances for a number of different control volumes, we could write energy balances for the same control volumes.

  5. Evapotranspiration ET= P – Q –ΔS - ΔD ΔS= watershed storage variation (mm): Send–Sbeginning P = Precipitation (mm) Q = Stream flow (mm) ΔD = Seepage out – seepage in (mm) ET = evaporation and transpiration (mm)

  6. Energy Budget for an ideal surface • Energy budget is: • Rn = H + LE + G • where Rn is net radiation at the surface; • H is sensible heat exchanged with the atmosphere; • LE is latent heat exchanged with the atmosphere; and • G is heat exchanged with the ground.

  7. Net Solar Energy Flux • The net flux of solar energy entering the land surface is therefore given as • K = Kin - Kout = Kin (1-a) • where • K in is the incident solar energy on the surface, and it includes direct solar radiation (i.e. that which makes it through the atmosphere unscathed) and diffuse (due to scattering by aerosols and gases); • Kout is the reflected flux; • a is the albedo • Solar radiation is measured in specialized meteorological stations with radiometers.

  8. More than 95% of 300mm in Arizona > 70% annual precipitation in the US In General: ET/P is ~ 1 for dry conditions ET/P < 1 for humid climates & ET is governed by available energy rather than availability of water For humid climates, vegetative cover affects the magnitude of ET and thus, Q (stream flow). In Dry climate, effect of vegetative cover on ET is limited. ET affects water yield by affecting antecedent water status of a watershed  high ET result in large storage to store part of precipitation Evapotranspiration

  9. Evapotranspiration • evapotranspiration summarizes all processes that return liquid water back into water vapor • - evaporation (E): direct transfer of water from open water bodies or soil surfaces • - transpiration (T): indirect transfer of water from root-stomatal system • of the water taken up by plants, ~95% is returned to the atmosphere through their stomata (only 5% is turned into biomass!) • Before E and T can occur there must be: • A flow of energy to the evaporating or transpiring surfaces • A flow of liquid water to these surfaces, and • A flow of vapor away from these surfaces. • Total ET is change as a result of any changes That happens to any of these 3.

  10. Three main factors affect E or T from evaporating & transpiring surfaces: Supply of energy to provide the latent heat of evaporation Ability to transport the vapor away from the evaporative surface Supply of water at the evaporative surface Source of energy? Is solar radiation What take vapors away from evaporating surface? Wind and humidity gradient Evaporation includes: Soil -- vegetation surface – transpiration => Evapotranspiration, ET

  11. The linkage between water and energy budgets • Is direct; • the net energy available at the earth’s surface is apportioned largely in response to the presence or absence of water. • Reasons for studying it are: • To develop a better understanding of Hydrological cycle • Be able to quantify or estimate E and ET (soil, water or snowmelt)

  12. Net radiation: Rn=(Ws+ws)(1- α)+Ia-Ig Rn is determined by measuring incoming & outgoing short- & long-wave rad. over a surface. Rn can – or + If Rn > 0 then can be allocated at a surface as follows: Rn = (L)(E) + H + G + Ps L is latent heat of vaporization, E evaporation, H energy flux that heats the air or sensible heat, G is heat of conduction to ground and Ps is energy of photosynthesis. LE represents energy available for evaporating water Rn is the primary source for ET & snow melt. Energy Budget

  13. In a watershed Rn, (LE) latent heat and sensible heat (H) are of interest. Sensible heat can be substantial in a watershed, Oasis effect were a well-watered plant community can receive large amounts of sensible heat from the surrounding dry, hot desert. See Table 3.2 comparison See box 3.1 illustrates the energy budget calculations for an oasis condition. An island of tall forest vegetation presents more surface area than an low-growing vegetation does (e.g. grass). The total latent heat flux is determined by: LE = Rn + H Advection is movement of warm air to cooler plant-soil-water surfaces. Convection is the vertical component of sensible-heat transfer.

  14. Water movement in plants • Illustration of the energy differentials which drive the water movement from the soil, into the roots, up the stalk, into the leaves and out into the atmosphere. The water moves from a less negative soil moisture tension to a more negative tension in the atmosphere.

  15. Yw~ -1.3 MPa Yw~ -1.0 MPa Yw~ -0.8 MPa Yw~ -0.75 MPa Yw~ -0.15 MPa Ys~ -0.025 MPa

  16. Soil Water Mass Balance • There are different ways to estimate drainage. • The direct method is the use of lysimeters. • Lysimeters have a weighing device and a drainage system, which permit continuous measurement of excess water and draining below the root zone and plant water use, evapotranspiration. Lysimeters have high cost and may not provide a reliable measurement of the field water balance.

  17. Water Mass balance Equation S =(I + R + U) - (D + RO + ET) • ET = Evapotranspiration • R, I = Rain & Irrigation • D = Drainage Below Rootzone • RO = Runoff • S = Soil Water Storage variation • U = upward capillary flow

  18. Rain Transpiration Evapo-transpiration Irrigation Evaporation Runoff Root Zone Water Storage Below Root Zone Drainage

  19. Effects of Vegetative Cover

  20. ET / Potential ET

  21. Available Soil Water

  22. ET & Available Soil Water

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