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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2017, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (7): 2207-2214.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.201707.003

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Deuterium isotope characteristics of precipitation infiltrated in the West Ordos Desert of Inner Mongolia, China

CHEN Jie1, XU Qing1*, GAO De-qiang1, MA Ying-bin1,2, ZHANG Bei-bei1, HAO Yu-guang2   

  1. 1Institute of Forest Ecology, Environment and Protection, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China
    2Experimental Center of Desert Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Dengkou 015200, Inner Mongolia, China
  • Received:2016-10-20 Revised:2017-03-07 Published:2017-07-18
  • Contact: *mail:xuqing@caf.ac.cn
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(31170661, 30771712, 31670720) and Forestry Industry Research Special Fund for Public Welfare(201504423).

Abstract: Understanding the soil-profile temporal and spatial distribution of rainwater in arid and semiarid regions provides a scientific basis for the restoration and maintenance of degraded desert ecosystems in the West Ordos Desert of Inner Mongolia, China. In this study, the deuterium isotope (δD) value of rainwater, soil water, and groundwater were examined in the West Ordos Desert. The contribution of precipitation to soil water in each layer of the soil profile was calculated with two-end linear mixed model. In addition, the temporal and spatial distribution of δD of soil water in the soil profile was analyzed under different-intensity precipitation. The results showed that small rainfall events (0-10 mm) affected the soil moisture and the δD value of soil water in surface soil (0-10 cm). About 30.3% to 87.9% of rainwater was kept in surface soil for nine days following the rainfall event. Medium rainfall events (10-20 mm) influenced the soil moisture and the δD value of soil water at soil depth of 0-40 cm. About 28.2% to 80.8% of rainwater was kept in soil layer of 0-40 cm for nine days following the medium rainfall event. Large (20-30 mm) and extremely large (>30 mm) rainfall events considerably influenced the soil moisture and δD value of soil water in each of the soil layers, except for the 100-150 cm layer. The δD value of soil water was between those δD values of rainwater and groundwater, which suggested that precipitation and groundwater were the sources of soil water in the West Ordos Desert. Under the same intensity rainfall, the δD value of surface soil water (0-10 cm) was directly affected by δD of rainwater. With increasing soil depth, the variation of soil water δD decreased, and the soil water of 100-150 cm kept stable. With increasing intensity of precipitation, the influence of precipitation on soil water δD lasted for a longer duration and occurred at a deeper soil depth.