Logo image
Unique stable isotope signatures of large cyclonic events as a tracer of soil moisture dynamics in the semiarid subtropics
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Unique stable isotope signatures of large cyclonic events as a tracer of soil moisture dynamics in the semiarid subtropics

G. Skrzypek, S. Dogramaci, G. F. M. Page, A. Rouillard and P. F. Grierson
Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam), Vol.578, Art. 124124
2019

Abstract

Cyclone Evaporation Moisture Semiarid Soil Stable isotope
•Cyclones deliver a unique stable isotope environmental tracer in the hot semi-arid sub-tropics.•Cyclones replenished soil moisture in the top 3.5 m of the unsaturated zone.•Evaporative losses from wet soil varied between 8 and 220 mm × yr−1.•Mean long-term groundwater recharge was <6 mm × yr−1. Evaporative flux from soils in arid and semi-arid climates can be very high and may substantially reduce soil moisture retained between infrequent rainfall events. Direct measurement of the evaporative losses from soils is technically challenging. However, environmental tracers such as water stable hydrogen and oxygen isotope composition can be used to calculate evaporation rates if the initial signature of the infiltrating rainwater is distinct from the signature of residual soil moisture. Large tropical cyclones typically result in rainfall events of large volume and very negative δ18O signatures that are significantly lower than the signatures of more frequent and smaller rainfall events. These very negative stable isotope signatures are retained in the soil and can be used to understand the depth of water infiltration, retention and subsequent rate of evaporation from the soil. At our study site in dry subtropical northwest Australia, we repeatedly sampled rainwater and soil moisture prior to, during and after tropical Cyclones Heidi and Lua in 2012. Site inundation from Cyclone Heidi (rainfall 213 mm, δ18O −17.6‰) replenished soil moisture in the unsaturated zone for several months, completely replacing soil moisture down to depths of ~3.5 m and contributing to groundwater recharge. The transient momentary evaporative losses from wet soil at the time of sampling varied between 0.21 and 0.60 mm × day−1 (equivalent to 76 to 220 mm × yr−1 recalculated as an annual rate). During the prolonged dry period between cyclones, evaporative losses decreased to between 8 and 30 mm × yr−1. Mean long-term groundwater recharge for the study site was low (<6 mm × yr−1). Recharge is primarily driven by infrequent but high-volume cyclones that are an important source of soil moisture and an essential water source for vegetation in this semi-arid environment. However, variation in lithology, position in the landscape and time since the last inundation contribute to highly heterogeneous patterns of δ18O in the vadose zone, which complicates upscaling observations from a local to a regional scale model of evaporative demand.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#6 Clean Water and Sanitation
#14 Life Below Water

Source: InCites

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Industry collaboration
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
8 Earth Sciences
8.140 Water Resources
8.140.566 Groundwater Geochemistry
Web Of Science research areas
Engineering, Civil
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Water Resources
ESI research areas
Engineering
Logo image