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Soil water dynamics in the Jarrah Forest of south-west Western Australia
Conference proceeding

Soil water dynamics in the Jarrah Forest of south-west Western Australia

J. K. Ruprecht and N. J. Schofield
Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium 1989: Comparisons in Austral Hydrology; Preprints of Papers, Vol.1(1), pp.454-458
Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, 1989: comparisons in Austral hydrology (University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand, 28/11/1989–30/11/1989)
1989

Abstract

Australasia Australia drainage basins forestry hydrodynamics Hydrogeology soils water regimes Western Australia
Soil water dynamics were measured on a hillslope transect in the jarrah forest of south-west Western Australia over the period 1984-86. The annual maximum to minimum unsaturated soil water storage was approximately 480 mm. This did not change significantly in years of substantially different winter rainfall. The depth of infiltration was dependent on annual rainfall, with groundwater recharge occurring over the whole hillslope in wet years but confined to the lower slopes in dry years. The average summer drying rate of the soil profile to 6 m depth was 3.5 mn day-1. In late summer the drying rate decreased downslope but increased midslope. Two relationships between streamflow to rainfall ratio and soil water storage were identified, the first from May to September and the second from October to December.

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