Effects of snow cover on soil freezing, water movement, and snowmelt infiltration: A paired plot experiment
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
A dramatic reduction in soil frost depth has been reported for Hokkaido Island of northern Japan over the last 20 years. Since soil frost strongly affects snowmelt infiltration and runoff, the reduction in frost depth may have altered the water and nutrient cycles in this region. A paired‐plot experiment was conducted in an agricultural field in Tokachi, Hokkaido, to compare the movement of soil water at different frost depths, controlled by manipulating the depth of snow cover. Snow was removed to enhance soil freezing in the treatment plot and was undisturbed in the control plot. The soil froze to a maximum depth of 0.43 m under the treatment plot and 0.11 m under the control plot. During the freezing period, the amount of upward soil water flux toward the freezing front in the treatment plot was more than double that in the control plot. During the snowmelt period, infiltration of meltwater was unimpeded by the thin frozen layer in the control plot, whereas the relatively thick frozen layer in the treatment plot impeded infiltration and generated 63 mm of runoff. These results clearly show that the changes in the timing and thickness of snow cover deposition can cause a dramatic reduction of frost depth and change in the soil water dynamics.
- American Geophysical Unionの論文
- 2010-09-02
著者
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Iwata Yukiyoshi
National Agricultural Research Center For Hokkaido Region
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HIROTA Tomoyoshi
National Agricultural Research Center for Hokkaido Region
関連論文
- Snowmelt Energy Balance and Its Relation to Foehn Events in Tokachi, Japan
- Decreasing Soil-Frost Depth and Its Relation to Climate Change in Tokachi, Hokkaido, Japan(NOTE AND CORRESPONDENCE)
- Optimal Soybean Cropping Season in Hokkaido to Reduce the Risk of Frost Damage in Spring and Fall
- Effects of snow cover on soil freezing, water movement, and snowmelt infiltration: A paired plot experiment
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