Interactions between precipitation and forest canopy elements (bark, leaves, and epiphytes) control the quantity, spatiotemporal patterning, and the chemical concentration, character and constituency of precipitation to soils. Canopy epiphytes are an element that exerts a range of storm-related hydrological and biogeochemical effects due to their diversity of morphological traits and nutrient acquisition mechanisms. We reviewed and evaluated the state of knowledge regarding epiphyte interactions with precipitation partitioning (into interception loss, throughfall, and stemflow) and the chemical alteration of net precipitation fluxes (throughfall and stemflow). As epiphyte species are quite diverse, this review categorized findings by common...
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) drives carbon (C) cycling in soils. Current DOM work has paid little ...
Epiphytes, including bryophytes and lichens, can significantly change the water interception and sto...
Woody ecosystems have a relatively thin but aerially extensive and dynamic layer of bark that, like ...
Material and energy exchange at the Earth\u27s surface is drastically altered by the presence of for...
Alterations to forest canopy structure directly affect the hydrology and biogeochemistry of wooded e...
Alterations to forest canopy structure directly affect the hydrology and biogeochemistry of wooded e...
To determine how epiphytes affect the canopy hydrology of old-growth Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menzie...
1. Epiphytes have the potential to modify the canopy environments in which they grow. Accurately eva...
Alterations to forest canopy structures can have a direct effect on hydrological and biogeochemical ...
Our goal was to determine how epiphytic lichens and bryophytes affect canopy latent heat fluxes in a...
Epiphytic plants account for high proportion of biomass in tropical montane rain forests. In high-el...
The abundant epiphyte vegetation of upper montane tropical rain forests, which in terms of biomass i...
Diversity and structure of the symbiotic soil microbial community significantly influences essential...
Epiphytes are aerial plants, often characterized by CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) photosynthesi...
Rainfall interception loss (In) accounts for 10 to 40 % of rainfall entering a forest canopy (Zinke,...
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) drives carbon (C) cycling in soils. Current DOM work has paid little ...
Epiphytes, including bryophytes and lichens, can significantly change the water interception and sto...
Woody ecosystems have a relatively thin but aerially extensive and dynamic layer of bark that, like ...
Material and energy exchange at the Earth\u27s surface is drastically altered by the presence of for...
Alterations to forest canopy structure directly affect the hydrology and biogeochemistry of wooded e...
Alterations to forest canopy structure directly affect the hydrology and biogeochemistry of wooded e...
To determine how epiphytes affect the canopy hydrology of old-growth Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menzie...
1. Epiphytes have the potential to modify the canopy environments in which they grow. Accurately eva...
Alterations to forest canopy structures can have a direct effect on hydrological and biogeochemical ...
Our goal was to determine how epiphytic lichens and bryophytes affect canopy latent heat fluxes in a...
Epiphytic plants account for high proportion of biomass in tropical montane rain forests. In high-el...
The abundant epiphyte vegetation of upper montane tropical rain forests, which in terms of biomass i...
Diversity and structure of the symbiotic soil microbial community significantly influences essential...
Epiphytes are aerial plants, often characterized by CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) photosynthesi...
Rainfall interception loss (In) accounts for 10 to 40 % of rainfall entering a forest canopy (Zinke,...
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) drives carbon (C) cycling in soils. Current DOM work has paid little ...
Epiphytes, including bryophytes and lichens, can significantly change the water interception and sto...
Woody ecosystems have a relatively thin but aerially extensive and dynamic layer of bark that, like ...