H43B-1500
Effect of Forest Age on Rainwater Infiltration in the Lowland Humid Tropics
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Edward W Kempema1, Alexis Mojica2, Guy Litt1, Austin M Carey1 and Fred L Ogden3, (1)University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, United States, (2)Technological University of Panama, Panama City, Panama, (3)Univ. of Wyoming - Dept 3295, Laramie, WY, United States
Abstract:
We are working in the headwaters of the Rio Agua Salud catchment in central Panama to test the hypothesis that varying land uses, including time since afforestation, have significant impacts on rainfall infiltration, runoff generation and groundwater recharge. Increased infiltration and groundwater recharge during the wet season may result in increased groundwater flow during the dry season, the “sponge effect hypothesis”. We irrigate a 6m by 2m test plot with slightly saline water at varying applied rainfall intensities using an ARS-type rainfall simulator, which has an oscillating boom mounted 2m above the forest floor, and four spray nozzles. We install 10cm tall lawn edging at the bottom of the test plot to direct surface water runoff to a small flume where runoff rates are recorded over time. In addition, we use time lapse ERI (electrical resistivity imaging) to map the vertical and downslope flow paths. We add NaCl to the applied water at a concentration of 200 mg/l, tagged with 10 mg/l LiBr as a salinity/conductivity contrast. Because ERI is highly sensitivity to changes in the electrical conductivity of soils and solute, we obtain a clear time-lapse image of flow path and bulk flow velocities. In this presentation we compare and contrast results of observations collected in an actively grazed cattle pasture adjacent ~10-12 year and >25 year old secondary forest plots using data collected during the 2015 wet season.