Murphy Sheila F, Stallard Robert F, Scholl Martha A, González Grizelle, Torres-Sánchez Angel J
U.S. Geological Survey, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.
U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jul 7;12(7):e0180987. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180987. eCollection 2017.
Mountains receive a greater proportion of precipitation than other environments, and thus make a disproportionate contribution to the world's water supply. The Luquillo Mountains receive the highest rainfall on the island of Puerto Rico and serve as a critical source of water to surrounding communities. The area's role as a long-term research site has generated numerous hydrological, ecological, and geological investigations that have been included in regional and global overviews that compare tropical forests to other ecosystems. Most of the forest- and watershed-wide estimates of precipitation (and evapotranspiration, as inferred by a water balance) have assumed that precipitation increases consistently with elevation. However, in this new analysis of all known current and historical rain gages in the region, we find that similar to other mountainous islands in the trade wind latitudes, leeward (western) watersheds in the Luquillo Mountains receive lower mean annual precipitation than windward (eastern) watersheds. Previous studies in the Luquillo Mountains have therefore overestimated precipitation in leeward watersheds by up to 40%. The Icacos watershed, however, despite being located at elevations 200-400 m below the tallest peaks and to the lee of the first major orographic barrier, receives some of the highest precipitation. Such lee-side enhancement has been observed in other island mountains of similar height and width, and may be caused by several mechanisms. Thus, the long-reported discrepancy of unrealistically low rates of evapotranspiration in the Icacos watershed is likely caused by previous underestimation of precipitation, perhaps by as much as 20%. Rainfall/runoff ratios in several previous studies suggested either runoff excess or runoff deficiency in Luquillo watersheds, but this analysis suggests that in fact they are similar to other tropical watersheds. Because the Luquillo Mountains often serve as a wet tropical archetype in global assessments of basic ecohydrological processes, these revised estimates are relevant to regional and global assessments of runoff efficiency, hydrologic effects of reforestation, geomorphic processes, and climate change.
山区比其他环境接收的降水量比例更大,因此对全球水资源供应的贡献不成比例。卢基约山脉是波多黎各岛上降雨量最高的地区,是周边社区的重要水源。该地区作为长期研究地点,引发了众多水文、生态和地质调查,这些调查已被纳入将热带森林与其他生态系统进行比较的区域和全球综述中。大多数针对森林和流域范围的降水量估计(以及通过水平衡推断的蒸散量)都假定降水量随海拔高度持续增加。然而,在对该地区所有已知的当前和历史雨量计进行的这项新分析中,我们发现,与信风纬度带的其他山区岛屿类似,卢基约山脉背风(西部)流域的年平均降水量低于迎风(东部)流域。因此,卢基约山脉此前的研究将背风流域的降水量高估了多达40%。然而,伊卡科斯流域尽管位于比最高峰低200 - 400米的海拔高度,且处于第一个主要地形屏障的背风处,却接收了一些最高的降水量。在其他高度和宽度相似的岛屿山脉中也观察到了这种背风侧增强现象,可能由多种机制导致。因此,长期以来报道的伊卡科斯流域蒸散率低得不切实际的差异,可能是由于之前降水量估计不足造成的,也许低估了多达20%。此前多项研究中的降雨/径流比表明卢基约流域要么径流过多要么径流不足,但这项分析表明,实际上它们与其他热带流域相似。由于在全球对基本生态水文过程的评估中,卢基约山脉常被用作湿润热带的原型,这些修订后的估计与径流效率、重新造林的水文效应、地貌过程和气候变化的区域及全球评估相关。