Prospective use of collected fog water in the restoration of degraded burned areas under dry Mediterranean conditions

TitleProspective use of collected fog water in the restoration of degraded burned areas under dry Mediterranean conditions
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsEstrela, M. J., Valiente J. a., Corell D., Fuentes D., & Valdecantos A.
JournalAgricultural and Forest Meteorology
Volume149
Pagination1896-1906
KeywordsMicro-irrigation, passive fog collection, Reforestation, Valencia region
Abstract

A mountainous plot located in the interior of the Valencia region (east coast of the Iberian Peninsula) was identified for reforestation using the fog-water collection potential prevailing in the area. Fog data were obtained by means of an instrument ensemble consisting of a passive cylindrical fog-water collector, a rain gauge, a wind direction and velocity sensor and a temperature and humidity probe. Preliminary results gave rise to the additional deployment of a low-cost 18-m2 flat-panel collector connected to three 1000-l tanks for larger scale fog-water collection and storage. The 2007 annual rate of fog water that could be derived from the instrument ensemble amounted to 3.3 l/m2 /day, which turn out to fill up the storage tanks completely in only 5 months, even though the flat-panel collector could not be operative 100% of the time. The study made use of the in situ stored water and a micro-irrigation network to irrigate a plot of reforestation seedlings through small water pulses localized deep in the planting hole during the summer dry period. Until the present, this forest location had always shown a difficult self-recovery due to the high level of land degradation resulting from recurrent forest fires in the past. Results indicate that survival rates and seedling performance of the two species planted, Pinus pinaster and Quercus ilex, improved with the use of small timely waterings and additional treatments with composted biosolid.