Comparative snow accumulation and melt during rainfall in forested and clear-cut plots in the western Cascades of Oregon

Year: 
1987
Publications Type: 
Journal Article
Publication Number: 
690
Citation: 

Berris, Steven N.; Harr, R. Dennis. 1987. Comparative snow accumulation and melt during rainfall in forested and clear-cut plots in the western Cascades of Oregon. Water Resources Research. 23(1): 135-142.

Abstract: 

Snow accumulation was compared between forested and clear-cut plots in the transient snow zone ofthe western Cascade Range of Oregon. and measured snowmelt in both plots was compared to meltpredicted by energy balance analyses. The absence of forest vegetation affected both snow accumulationand amount of energy available for melt during rainfall. Because intercepted snow melted in the forestcanopy and reached the ground as meltwater, water equivalents in the clear-cut plot were commonly 2-3times greater than those in the forested plot. During the largest rain-on-snow event of the study,measured water outflow (rain plus snowmelt) in the clear-cut plot was 21% greater than in the forestedplot. Estimates made from microclimatological data show that during the common period of melt, totalenergy available in the clear-cut plot was 40% greater than that in the forested plot. Because of greaterwind speed in the clear-cut plot, combined sensible and latent heat transfers in the clear-cut plot werenearly triple those of the forested plot.