EGU21-12904
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12904
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Structural, Hydrologic, and Sediment Connectivity in a Shrub-Encroached and Restored Semiarid Grassland

Justin Johnson1,2, Jason Williams2, Phillip Guertin1, Steven Archer1, Philip Heilman2, Frederick Pierson3, and Haiyan Wei1,2
Justin Johnson et al.
  • 1University of Arizona, College of Agriculture and Life Science, School of Natural Resources and the Environment, Tucson, United States of America (justinjohnson@email.arizona.edu)
  • 2U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Southwest Watershed Research Center, Tucson, United States of America
  • 3U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Northwest Watershed Research Center, Boise, United States of America

Shrub encroachment of semiarid grasslands is influenced by connected runoff and erosion patterns that preferentially accumulate resources under vegetated patches (canopy microsites) and deplete interspaces. Soil loss from dryland hillslopes results when areas of bare ground become structurally and functionally connected through overland flow. Although these patterns have been well-described, uncertainty remains regarding how these feedbacks respond to restoration practices. This study compared the structure and hydrologic function of a shrub-encroached semiarid grassland treated five years prior with the herbicide, tebuthiuron, to that of an adjacent untreated grassland. Through a series of hydrologic experiments conducted at increasing spatial scales, vegetation and soil structural patterns were related to runoff and erosion responses. At a fine scale (0.5 m2), rainfall simulations (120 mm·h-1 rainfall intensity; 45 min) showed herbicided shrub canopy microsites had greater infiltration capacities (105 and 71 mm·h-1 terminal infiltration rates) and were less susceptible to splash-sheet erosion (3 and 26 g sediment yield) than untreated shrub canopy microsites, while interspaces were statistically comparable between study sites. Concentrated flow simulations at a coarse scale (~9 m2) revealed that gaps between the bases of vegetation (i.e. basal gaps) > 2 mwere positively related to both concentrated flow runoff (r = 0.72, p = 0.008) and sediment yield (r = 0.70, p = 0.012). Modeled hillslope-scale (50 m2) runoff and erosion (120 mm·h-1 rainfall intensity; 45 min) indicated less soil loss in the tebuthiuron-treated site (1.78 Mg·ha-1 tebuthiuron; 3.19 Mg·ha-1 untreated), even though runoff was similar between sites. Our results suggest interspaces in shrub-encroached grasslands continue to be runoff sources following herbicide-induced shrub mortality and may be indicators of runoff responses at larger spatial scales. In contrast, sediment sources are limited post-treatment due to lesser sediment detachment from sheet-splash and concentrated flow processes. Reduced sediment supplies provide evidence that connectivity feedbacks that sustain a shrub-dominant ecological state may have been dampened post-treatment. Our study also highlights the utility of simple measures of structural connectivity, such as basal gaps, as an indicator of hillslope susceptibility to increased runoff and erosion.

How to cite: Johnson, J., Williams, J., Guertin, P., Archer, S., Heilman, P., Pierson, F., and Wei, H.: Structural, Hydrologic, and Sediment Connectivity in a Shrub-Encroached and Restored Semiarid Grassland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12904, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12904, 2021.

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