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Featured researches published by Thomas W. Giambelluca.


Tree Physiology | 2014

Transpiration characteristics of a rubber plantation in central Cambodia

Nakako Kobayashi; Tomo’omi Kumagai; Yoshiyuki Miyazawa; Kazuho Matsumoto; Makiko Tateishi; Tiva Khan Lim; Ryan G. Mudd; Alan D. Ziegler; Thomas W. Giambelluca; Song Yin

The rapid and widespread expansion of rubber plantations in Southeast Asia necessitates a greater understanding of tree physiology and the impacts of water consumption on local hydrology. Sap flow measurements were used to study the intra- and inter-annual variations in transpiration rate (Et) in a rubber stand in the low-elevation plain of central Cambodia. Mean stand sap flux density (JS) indicates that rubber trees actively transpire in the rainy season, but become inactive in the dry season. A sharp, brief drop in JS occurred simultaneously with leaf shedding in the middle of the dry season in January. Although the annual maxima of JS were approximately the same in the two study years, the maximum daily stand Et of ∼2.0 mm day(-1) in 2010 increased to ∼2.4 mm day(-1) in 2011. Canopy-level stomatal response was well explained by changes in solar radiation, vapor pressure deficit, soil moisture availability, leaf area, and stem diameter. Rubber trees had a relatively small potential to transpire at the beginning of the study period, compared with average diffuse-porous species. After 2 years of growth in stem diameter, transpiration potential was comparable to other species. The sensitivity of canopy conductance (gc) to atmospheric drought indicates isohydric behavior of rubber trees. Modeling also predicted a relatively small sensitivity of gc to the soil moisture deficit and a rapid decrease in gc under extreme drought conditions. However, annual observations suggest the possibility of a change in leaf characteristics with tree maturity and/or initiation of latex tapping. The estimated annual stand Et was 469 mm year(-1) in 2010, increasing to 658 mm year(-1) in 2011. Diagnostic analysis using the derived gc model showed that inter-annual change in stand Et in the rapidly growing young rubber stand was determined mainly by tree growth rate, not by differences in air and soil variables in the surrounding environment. Future research should focus on the potentially broad applicability of the relationship between Et and tree size as well as environmental factors at stands different in terms of clonal type and age.


Global Change Biology | 2014

Changing climate and the altitudinal range of avian malaria in the Hawaiian Islands: an ongoing conservation crisis on the island of Kaua'i

Carter T. Atkinson; Ruth B. Utzurrum; Dennis A. LaPointe; Richard J. Camp; Lisa H. Crampton; Jeffrey T. Foster; Thomas W. Giambelluca


Archive | 2004

Cloud Water Interception at two Tropical Montane Cloud Forest Sites in Hawai'i

Thomas W. Giambelluca; J. K. Delay; Michael A. Nullet; Martha A. Scholl; Stephen B. Gingerich


Archive | 2015

Climatology of Haleakalā

Ryan J. Longman; Thomas W. Giambelluca; Michael A. Nullet; Lloyd L. Loope


Archive | 2008

Stand Structural Controls on Evapotranspiration in Native and Invaded Tropical Montane Cloud Forest in Hawai'i

Thomas W. Giambelluca; J. K. Delay; Gregory P. Asner; Ruth Elwood Martin; Michael A. Nullet; M. X. Huang; Ryan G. Mudd; M. Takahashi


Archive | 2003

Quantifying the Role of Cloud Water in the Hydrology of Two Montane Forest Sites on East Maui, Hawaii

Martha A. Scholl; Stephen B. Gingerich; Thomas W. Giambelluca; Michael A. Nullet; Lloyd L. Loope


Water Resources Research | 2016

Evapotranspiration of rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) cultivated at two plantation sites in Southeast Asia: RUBBER EVAPOTRANSPIRATION IN SE ASIA

Thomas W. Giambelluca; Ryan G. Mudd; Wen Liu; Alan D. Ziegler; Nakako Kobayashi; Tomo’omi Kumagai; Yoshiyuki Miyazawa; Tiva Khan Lim; Maoyi Huang; Jefferson Fox; Song Yin; Sophea Veasna Mak; Poonpipope Kasemsap


Archive | 2010

Assessment of Spatial and Temporal Microclimatic Variability Using the HaleNet Climate Network on Haleakala Volcano, Maui, Hawai`i

R. W. Longman; Thomas W. Giambelluca; Michael A. Nullet


Archive | 2009

Effects of Canopy Wetness on Evapotranspiration in Native and Invaded Tropical Montane Cloud Forest in Hawai`i

Thomas W. Giambelluca; J. K. Delay; M. Takahashi; Ryan G. Mudd; M. X. Huang; Gregory P. Asner; Ruth Elwood Martin; Michael A. Nullet


Archive | 2008

Carbon Dynamics of Montane Native Hawaiian Rainforests Under Climate Change: Empirical and Modeling Studies

M. X. Huang; Gregory P. Asner; Thomas W. Giambelluca

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Gregory P. Asner

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Lloyd L. Loope

United States Geological Survey

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Martha A. Scholl

United States Geological Survey

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Stephen B. Gingerich

United States Geological Survey

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Alan D. Ziegler

National University of Singapore

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Carter T. Atkinson

United States Geological Survey

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