TY - JOUR A1 - Haßler, Sibylle Kathrin A1 - Lark, R. M. A1 - Zimmermann, Beate A1 - Elsenbeer, Helmut T1 - Which sampling design to monitor saturated hydraulic conductivity? JF - European journal of soil science N2 - Soil in a changing world is subject to both anthropogenic and environmental stresses. Soil monitoring is essential to assess the magnitude of changes in soil variables and how they affect ecosystem processes and human livelihoods. However, we cannot always be sure which sampling design is best for a given monitoring task. We employed a rotational stratified simple random sampling (rotStRS) for the estimation of temporal changes in the spatial mean of saturated hydraulic conductivity (K-s) at three sites in central Panama in 2009, 2010 and 2011. To assess this design's efficiency we compared the resulting estimates of the spatial mean and variance for 2009 with those gained from stratified simple random sampling (StRS), which was effectively the data obtained on the first sampling time, and with an equivalent unexecuted simple random sampling (SRS). The poor performance of geometrical stratification and the weak predictive relationship between measurements of successive years yielded no advantage of sampling designs more complex than SRS. The failure of stratification may be attributed to the small large-scale variability of K-s. Revisiting previously sampled locations was not beneficial because of the large small-scale variability in combination with destructive sampling, resulting in poor consistency between revisited samples. We conclude that for our K-s monitoring scheme, repeated SRS is equally effective as rotStRS. Some problems of small-scale variability might be overcome by collecting several samples at close range to reduce the effect of small-scale variation. Finally, we give recommendations on the key factors to consider when deciding whether to use stratification and rotation in a soil monitoring scheme. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.12174 SN - 1351-0754 SN - 1365-2389 VL - 65 IS - 6 SP - 792 EP - 802 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haßler, Sibylle Kathrin A1 - Zimmermann, Beate A1 - van Breugel, Michiel A1 - Hall, Jefferson S. A1 - Elsenbeer, Helmut T1 - Recovery of saturated hydraulic conductivity under secondary succession on former pasture in the humid tropics JF - Forest ecology and management N2 - Landscapes in the humid tropics are undergoing a continuous change in land use. Deforestation is still taking its toll on forested areas, but at the same time more and more secondary forests emerge where formerly agricultural lands and pastures are being abandoned. Regarding soil hydrology, the extent to which secondary succession can recover soil hydrological properties disturbed by antecedent deforestation and pasture use is yet poorly understood. We investigated the effect of secondary succession on saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) at two soil depths (0-6 and 6-12 cm) using a space-for-time approach in a landscape mosaic in central Panama. The following four land-use classes were studied: pasture (P), secondary forest of 5-8 years of age (SF5), secondary forest of 12-15 years of age (SF12) and secondary forest of more than 100 years of age (SF100), each replicated altogether four times in different micro-catchments across the study region. The hydrological implications of differences in Ks in response to land-use change with land use, especially regarding overland flow generation, were assessed via comparisons with rainfall intensities. Recovery of Ks could be detected in the 0-6 cm depth after 12 years of secondary succession: P and SF5 held similar Ks values, but differed significantly (alpha = 0.05) from SF12 and SF100 which in turn were indistinguishable. Variability within the land cover classes was large but, due to sufficient replication in the study, Ks recovery could be detected nonetheless. Ks in the 6-12 cm depth did not show any differences between the land cover classes; only Ks of the uppermost soil layer was affected by land-use changes. Overland flow - as inferred from comparisons of Ks with rainfall intensities - is more likely on P and SF5 sites compared to SF12 and 5E100 for the upper sample depth; however, generally low values at the 6-12 cm depth are likely to impede vertical percolation during high rainfall intensities regardless of land use. We conclude that Ks can recover from pasture use under secondary succession up to pre-pasture levels, but the process may take more than 8 years. In order to gain comprehensive understanding of Ks change with land use and its hydrological implications, more studies with detailed land-use histories and combined measurements of Ks, overland flow, precipitation and throughfall are essential. KW - Land cover change KW - Forest KW - Land use KW - Overland flow KW - Soil hydrology KW - Ecosystem services Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2010.06.031 SN - 0378-1127 SN - 1872-7042 VL - 261 IS - 10 SP - 1634 EP - 1642 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haßler, Sibylle Kathrin A1 - Lark, Richard M. A1 - Milne, A. E. A1 - Elsenbeer, Helmut T1 - Exploring the variation in soil saturated hydraulic conductivity under a tropical rainforest using the wavelet transform JF - European journal of soil science N2 - Saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) of the soil is a key variable in the water cycle. For the humid tropics, information about spatial scales of Ks and their relation to soil types deduced from soil map units is of interest, as soil maps are often the only available data source for modelling. We examined the influence of soil map units on the mean and variation in Ks along a transect in a tropical rainforest using undisturbed soil cores at 06 and 612 cm depth. The Ks means were estimated with a linear mixed model fitted by residual maximum likelihood (REML), and the spatial variation in Ks was investigated with the maximum overlap discrete wavelet packet transform (MODWPT). The mean values of Ks did not differ between soil map units. The best wavelet packet basis for Ks at 06 cm showed stationarity at high frequencies, suggesting uniform small-scale influences such as bioturbation. There were substantial contributions to wavelet packet variance over the range of spatial frequencies and a pronounced low frequency peak corresponding approximately to the scale of soil map units. However, in the relevant frequency intervals no significant changes in wavelet packet variance were detected. We conclude that near-surface Ks is not dominated by static, soil-inherent properties for the examined range of soils. Several indicators from the wavelet packet analysis hint at the more dominant dynamic influence of biotic processes, which should be kept in mind when modelling soil hydraulic properties on the basis of soil maps. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2389.2011.01400.x SN - 1351-0754 VL - 62 IS - 6 SP - 891 EP - 901 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Haßler, Sibylle Kathrin A1 - Kreyling, Jürgen A1 - Beierkuhnlein, Carl A1 - Eisold, Jenny A1 - Samimi, Cyrus A1 - Wagenseil, H. A1 - Jentsch, A. T1 - Vegetation pattern divergence between dry and wet season in a semiarid savanna : spatio-temporal dynamics of plant diversity in northwest Namibia N2 - African savannas are primarily used as pastures and are subject to changes in climate and management strategies. For sustainable management of these landscapes ecological knowledge on seasonal and long-term variability in plant community composition and the availability of green biomass is essential. In this study, we assessed the effects of dry and wet season on species richness and beta diversity for three sites along a gradient of increasing vegetation cover and precipitation in northwest Namibia. A hexagonal systematic sampling design was used to record floristic data. The Simple Matching, Soerensen, and multi-plot similarity coefficient and distance decay analyses were applied for examining beta diversity. Analyses were repeated while separating the plots according to the presence of woody vegetation. Species richness nearly doubled from dry to wet season; compositional similarity increased from dry to wet season and with increasing aridity of the study sites: distance decay was more pronounced in the dry season without any link to the precipitation gradient. Woody elements in the landscape, which occur along drainage lines or as tree islands, govern spatial and seasonal plant diversity fluctuations. Monitoring them is important for conservation strategies and for establishing grazing rules that ensure a sustainable use of savanna ecosystems. Y1 - 2010 UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01401963 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaridenv.2010.05.021 SN - 0140-1963 ER - TY - THES A1 - Haßler, Sibylle Kathrin T1 - Saturated hydraulic conductivity in the humid tropics : sources of variability, implications for monitoring and effects on near-surface hydrological flow paths T1 - Quellen der Variabilität der gesättigten hydraulischen Leitfähigkeit in den humiden Tropen, ihre Bedeutung für die Beprobung der Leitfähigkeit und ihre Auswirkungen auf bodennahe hydrologische Fließpfade N2 - Large areas in the humid tropics are currently undergoing land-use change. The decrease of tropical rainforest, which is felled for land clearing and timber production, is countered by increasing areas of tree plantations and secondary forests. These changes are known to affect the regional water cycle as a result of plant-specific water demand and by influencing key soil properties which determine hydrological flow paths. One of these key properties sensitive to land-use change is the saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) as it governs vertical percolation of water within the soil profile. Low values of Ks in a certain soil depth can form an impeding layer and lead to perched water tables and the development of predominantly lateral flow paths such as overland flow. These processes can induce nutrient redistribution, erosion and soil degradation and thus affect ecosystem services and human livelihoods. Due to its sensitivity to land-use change, Ks is commonly used to assess the associated changes in hydrological flow paths. The objective of this dissertation was to assess the effect of land-use change on hydrological flow paths by analysing Ks as indicator variable. Sources of Ks variability, their implications for Ks monitoring and the relationship between Ks and near-surface hydrological flow paths in the context of land-use change were studied. The research area was located in central Panama, a country widely experiencing the abovementioned changes in land use. Ks is dependent on both static, soil-inherent properties such as particle size and clay mineralogy and dynamic, land use-dependent properties such as organic carbon content. By conducting a pair of studies with one of these influences held constant in each, the importance of static and dynamic properties for Ks was assessed. Applying a space-for-time approach to sample Ks under secondary forests of different age classes on comparable soils, a recovery of Ks from the former pasture use was shown to require more than eight years. The process was limited to the 0−6 cm sampling depth and showed large variability among replicates. A wavelet analysis of a Ks transect crossing different soil map units under comparable land cover, old-growth tropical rainforest, showed large small-scale variability, which was attributed to biotic influences, as well as a possible but non-conclusive influence of soil types. The two results highlight the importance of dynamic, land use-dependent influences on Ks. Monitoring studies can help to quantify land use-induced change of Ks, but there is a variety of sampling designs which differ in efficiency of estimating mean Ks. A comparative study of four designs and their suitability for Ks monitoring is used to give recommendations about designing a Ks monitoring scheme. Quantifying changes in spatial means of Ks for small catchments with a rotational stratified sampling design did not prove to be more efficient than Simple Random Sampling. The lack of large-scale spatial structure prevented benefits of stratification, and large small-scale variability resulting from local biotic processes and artificial effects of destructive sampling caused a lack of temporal consistency in the re-sampling of locations, which is part of the rotational design. The relationship between Ks and near-surface hydrological flow paths is of critical importance when assessing the consequences of land-use change in the humid tropics. The last part of this dissertation aimed at disclosing spatial relationships between Ks and overland flow as influenced by different land cover types. The effects of Ks on overland-flow generation were spatially variable, different between planar plots and incised flowlines and strongly influenced by land-cover characteristics. A simple comparison of Ks values and rainfall intensities was insufficient to describe the observed pattern of overland flow. Likewise, event flow in the stream was apparently not directly related to overland flow response patterns within the catchments. The study emphasises the importance of combining pedological, hydrological, meteorological and botanical measurements to comprehensively understand the land use-driven change in hydrological flow paths. In summary, Ks proved to be a suitable parameter for assessing the influence of land-use change on soils and hydrological processes. The results illustrated the importance of land cover and spatial variability of Ks for decisions on sampling designs and for interpreting overland-flow generation. As relationships between Ks and overland flow were shown to be complex and dependent on land cover, an interdisciplinary approach is required to comprehensively understand the effects of land-use change on soils and near-surface hydrological flow paths in the humid tropics. N2 - Tropische Regionen sind einem andauernden Landnutzungswandel unterworfen. Einerseits wird tropischer Regenwald für Holz- und Flächengewinnung abgeholzt, andererseits fallen Flächen im Zuge der Urbanisierung brach. Diese werden zum Teil mit Nutzholz-Plantagen aufgeforstet, zum Teil entwickelt sich auf ihnen natürlicher Sekundärwald. Änderungen in der Landnutzung beeinflussen Bodeneigenschaften und dadurch implizit den Wasserkreislauf der Region. Eine dieser wichtigen landnutzungsabhängigen Bodeneigenschaften ist die gesättigte hydraulische Leitfähigkeit oder Permeabilität, die maßgeblich die Versickerungsrate im Boden bestimmt. Eine niedrige Permeabilität hemmt die (vertikale) Versickerung und kann dazu führen, dass laterale hydrologische Fließpfade wie z.B. Oberflächenabfluss aktiviert werden. Dadurch wird sowohl die Bodenerosion und Nährstoffverlagerung verstärkt als auch die Auffüllung des Grundwasserspeichers verringert. In welchem Maße jedoch die Änderung der Permeabilität während des Landnutzungswandels eine Änderung der hydrologischen Fließpfade nach sich zieht, ist noch unzureichend erforscht. Die Zielstellung der vorliegenden Dissertation war, mit Hilfe der Permeabilität als Indikatorvariable die Auswirkungen des Landnutzungswandels auf bodennahe hydrologische Fließpfade zu beurteilen. Dabei sollten die Quellen der Variabilität der Permeabilität anhand des Einflusses von Bodentyp und Landnutzung eingeschätzt, diese Variabilität in das Design einer Probenahmestrategie für die Permeabilität integriert und die Auswirkungen dieser Einflüsse auf die Aktivierung lateraler Fließpfade untersucht werden. Die Studien wurden in Panama durchgeführt, da dieses Land stark vom Landnutzungswandel betroffen ist, eine gute Forschungsinfrastruktur aufweist und sich durch die hohen Niederschläge des tropischen Klimas Änderungen im Wasserkreislauf besonders stark auswirken. Zwei Teilstudien zu den Quellen der Variabilität der Permeabilität lieferten Hinweise auf einen möglichen Einfluss des Bodentyps, der jedoch durch den lokal stärkeren Einfluss der Landnutzung überprägt wurde. Auf regionaler Skala wurde die Erholung der Permeabilität unter Sekundärwald nach einer vorhergehenden Weidenutzung belegt. Beide Studien deuteten auf einen maßgeblichen Einfluss der Landnutzung und der räumlichen Struktur der Permeabilität auf die untersuchten Prozesse hin. Für die effiziente Abschätzung zeitlicher Veränderungen der Permeabilität, wie sie im Zuge des Landnutzungswandels auftritt, ist die Einbeziehung dieser räumlichen Strukturen in das Design einer Probenahmestrategie für die Permeabilität von großer Bedeutung, wie in einem Vergleich vier verschiedener Designs gezeigt wurde. Der Zusammenhang zwischen der Permeabilität und der Entstehung von Oberflächenabfluss konnte nicht durch einfache Ansätze, wie dem Vergleich der Permeabilität mit Regenintensitäten oder der Betrachtung des Gebietsabflusses, erklärt werden. Vielmehr scheint ein komplexes Zusammenspiel aus meteorologischen, biologischen, bodenkundlichen und hydrologischen Faktoren zu wirken. So wurde die räumliche Struktur des Oberflächenabflusses im Untersuchungsgebiet vermutlich durch eine Kombination aus Landnutzungs- und Permeabilitäts-Einflüssen bedingt, zu deren Aufklärung weitere notwendige Messungen vorgeschlagen werden. Zusammengefasst konnte anhand der Permeabilität der Einfluss des Landnutzungswandels auf die hydrologischen Fließpfade gut aufgezeigt werden. Eine besondere Bedeutung kommt hierbei der Betrachtung der landnutzungsabhängigen räumlichen Struktur der Permeabilität zu. Für die Prozessaufklärung der Aktivierung lateraler Fließpfade müssen jedoch Messungen aus verschiedenen Disziplinen kombiniert werden. KW - Bodenhydrologie KW - Landnutzungswandel KW - Tropen KW - Probenahmestrategie KW - hydrologische Fließpfade KW - Soil hydrology KW - land-use change KW - tropics KW - monitoring KW - hydrological flow paths Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-66864 ER -