Does afforestation increase soil water buffering? A demonstrator study on soil moisture variability in the Alpine Geroldsbach catchment, Austria

Roy E. Molenaar*, Manfred Kleidorfer, Bernhard Kohl, Adriaan J. Teuling, Stefan Achleitner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

This study employed an operational monitoring network to measure soil moisture and runoff behaviour continuously in the Alpine catchment Geroldsbach-Götzens, Austria. We hypothesize that afforestation can have a positive impact on soil water buffering. To analyse the impact of soil properties and vegetation cover changes on soil water dynamics, four experimental plots were established on grassland and monitoring stations were installed in the forest. The rainfall test site is equipped with an automatic weather station to obtain meteorological observations, and weirs to measure surface runoff of natural occurring precipitation events and artificial rainfall simulations. In the plots, 200 soil moisture sensors were installed at five different depths, aimed to track and visualize infiltration and subsurface flow processes. Another twenty sensors monitored soil moisture at different afforestation stages in the forested part of the catchment. The measurements show that soils covered with young and old-growth forest have a higher and more stable soil moisture content than grassland and soils with a lack of vegetation throughout the seasons. We observed large spatial differences at plot scale, where the spatial variability of soil moisture increases with depth and is highest during convective precipitation. The initial conditions and rainfall characteristics play an important role in infiltration processes and soil water storage. Our rainfall test site demonstrated the challenges of innovative monitoring techniques and that it offers opportunities for more experiments to gather evidence-based data as input for flood models. Overall findings confirm the sponge effect of forest soils and indicate that afforestation as Nature-Based Solution reduces the temporal soil moisture variability, buffering soil water during precipitation events, which can be beneficial for runoff reduction in Alpine catchments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number131984
JournalJournal of Hydrology
Volume643
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Keywords

  • Afforested catchment
  • Alpine Region
  • Infiltration processes
  • Nature-Based Solutions
  • Runoff plots

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