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Available online at www.sciencedirect.com <br />/�—/7 AGRICULTURAL <br />SCIENCE/!? DIRECT* AND <br />FOREST <br />METEOROLOGY <br />ELSMER Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 137 (2006) 56-67 <br />www.elsevier.com /locate /agrformet <br />Controls on transpiration in a semiarid riparian cottonwood forest <br />Rico M. Gazal a' *, Russell L. Scott b, <br />David C. Goodrich b. David G. Williams <br />a Department of Land Resources, Glenville State College, 200 High Street, Glenville, WV 26351, USA <br />b Southwest Watershed Research Center, USDA -ARS, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA <br />`Department of Renewable Resources, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA <br />Received 13 July 2005; accepted 2 March 2006 <br />Abstract <br />Cottonwood (Populus spp.) forests are conspicuous and functionally important elements of riparian vegetation throughout much of <br />the western U.S. Understanding how transpiration by this vegetation type responds to environmental forcing is important for <br />determining the water balance dynamics of riparian ecosystems threatened by groundwater depletion. Transpiration was measured in <br />semiarid riparian cottonwood (Populus fremontii) stands along a perennial and an intermittent reach of the San Pedro River in <br />southeastern Arizona. Sap flow was measured using thermal dissipation probes and scaled to the stand level to investigate stand water <br />use in relation to canopy structure, depth to groundwater and climate forcing. The cottonwood stand located at the perennial stream site <br />had higher leaf -to- sapwood area ratio (0.31 f 0.04 m2 cm -2), leaf area index (2.75) and shallower groundwater depth (1.1 -1.8 m) than <br />the stand at the intermittent stream site (0.21 f 0.04 m2 cm-2, 1.75 and 3.1 -3.9 m, respectively). Moreover, total annual transpiration <br />was higher at the perennial stream site (966 mm) than at the intermittent stream site (484 mm). The significant positive and linear <br />correlation between transpiration and vapor pressure deficit indicated high hydraulic conductance along the root -shoot pathway of <br />cottonwood trees at the perennial stream site. During the peak dry period prior to the summer rainy season, the trees at the intermittent <br />stream site exhibited greater water stress as transpiration did not increase beyond its mid - morning peak with increasing vapor pressure <br />deficit, which was likely due to leaf stomatal closure. However, this stress was alleviated after significant monsoonal rains and runoff <br />events had recharged soil moisture and raised groundwater levels. Riparian cottonwood forests are exposed to extreme fluctuations in <br />water availability and transpiration demand throughout the growing season, and their access to shallow groundwater sources <br />determines their structural and physiological responses to drought. Spatial and temporal variation in depth to groundwater induces <br />drought stress in cottonwood threatening their productivity and existence along the river systems throughout much of western U.S. <br />© 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. <br />Keywords: Populus fremontii; Riparian vegetation water use; Riparian consumptive groundwater use; Transpiration; Sap flow <br />1. Introduction <br />Riparian cottonwood (Populus spp.) forests in the <br />western United States are ecologically and hydrologi- <br />cally important features of the and landscape. Cotton- <br />wood trees in these forests have high rates of <br />* Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 304 462 73610372; <br />fax: +1 304 462 8709. <br />E -mail address: rico.gazal @glenville.edu (R.M. Gazal). <br />0168- 1923/$ — see front matter © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. <br />doi: 10.1016 /j.agrformet.2006.03.002 <br />transpiration due to the trees' access to groundwater <br />and the high evaporative demand of the atmosphere <br />(Schaeffer et al., 2000; Dahm et al., 2002). However, <br />leaf gas exchange physiology of cottonwood is <br />extremely sensitive to local hydrologic conditions. <br />Depth to groundwater and proximity to surface stream <br />flow are key environmental features strongly determin- <br />ing cottonwood stomatal conductance and photosynth- <br />esis (Leffler and Evans, 1999; Horton et a1., 2001 a; Potts <br />and Williams, 2004). <br />