Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15930
Title: Modeling potential impacts of planting palms or tree in small holder fruit plantations on ecohydrological processes in the central Amazon
Authors: Kunert, Norbert
Aparecido, Luiza Maria Teóphilo
Barros, Priscila
Higuchi, Niro
Keywords: Forestry
Fruits
Transpiration
Water Supply
Dicot
Monocot
Recycling Capacity
Regional Water Balance
Sap Flux
Sap Flux Measurements
Terra Firme
Transpiration Rates
Water Recycling
Dicotyledon
Eco-hydrology
Flux Measurement
Fruit
Monocotyledon
Plantation Forestry
Sap Flow
Smallholder
Transpiration
Water Budget
Water Use
Fruits
Plantations
Plants
Species Identification
Transpiration
Amazonas
Amazonia
Manaus
Dicotyledoneae
Euterpe Oleracea
Theobroma Grandiflorum
Issue Date: 2015
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Forests
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 6, Número 8, Pags. 2530-2544
Abstract: Native fruiting plants are widely cultivated in the Amazon, but little information on their water use characteristics can be found in the literature. To explore the potential impacts of plantations on local to regional water balance, we studied plant water use characteristics of two native fruit plants commonly occurring in the Amazon region. The study was conducted in a mixed fruit plantation containing a dicot tree species (Cupuaçu, Theobroma grandiflorum) and a monocot palm species (Açai, Euterpe oleracea) close to the city of Manaus, in the Central Amazon. Scaling from sap flux measurements, palms had a 3.5-fold higher water consumption compared to trees with a similar diameter. Despite the high transpiration rates of the palms, our plantation had only one third of the potential water recycling capacity of natural forests in the area. Converting natural forest into such plantations will thus result in significantly higher runoff rates. © 2015 by the authors.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.3390/f6082530
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