Eddy-covariance measurements, which were performed in the summer 2003 in an alpine grassland site, were used to determine the footprint of CO2 turbulent fluxes and to investigate its dependence on stability. The analysis is based on the spatial variability of carbon sinks generated by the difference in the time of the cutting of two concentric portions of the footprint, located outside and inside the fence surrounding the eddy tower, at approximately 30 m distance. Due to this time difference, turbulent flux measurements were performed both in homogeneous (BEFORE and AFTER cutting) and heterogeneous (BETWEEN cuts) condition of spatial sink distribution. The analysis is based exclusively on daytime measurements. Half-hourly records ranked in two stability classes were used to calculate light response functions separately for three 10-day periods (BEFORE, BETWEEN and AFTER cutting). The contribution of the area inside the fence to the total flux was determined for different photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) values considering the BETWEEN cuts light response curve as a weighted average of the BEFORE and AFTER ones. The weight of the BEFORE cutting light response curve has been analytically determined and corresponds to the flux fraction which originates from inside the fence. The experimental estimates of the relative importance of the area inside the fence produced values ranging from 30%, during stable conditions, and up to 80% during unstable conditions. These values derived from observations were later compared with the predictions of three analytical footprint models. One of the models systematically underestimated experimental observations, while observations concurred with the other two, particularly in moderately unstable conditions.

Marcolla, B.; Cescatti, A. (2005). Experimental analysis of flux footprint for varying stability conditions in an alpine meadow. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 135 (1-4): 291-301. doi: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2005.12.007 handle: http://hdl.handle.net/10449/20840

Experimental analysis of flux footprint for varying stability conditions in an alpine meadow

Marcolla, Barbara;
2005-01-01

Abstract

Eddy-covariance measurements, which were performed in the summer 2003 in an alpine grassland site, were used to determine the footprint of CO2 turbulent fluxes and to investigate its dependence on stability. The analysis is based on the spatial variability of carbon sinks generated by the difference in the time of the cutting of two concentric portions of the footprint, located outside and inside the fence surrounding the eddy tower, at approximately 30 m distance. Due to this time difference, turbulent flux measurements were performed both in homogeneous (BEFORE and AFTER cutting) and heterogeneous (BETWEEN cuts) condition of spatial sink distribution. The analysis is based exclusively on daytime measurements. Half-hourly records ranked in two stability classes were used to calculate light response functions separately for three 10-day periods (BEFORE, BETWEEN and AFTER cutting). The contribution of the area inside the fence to the total flux was determined for different photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) values considering the BETWEEN cuts light response curve as a weighted average of the BEFORE and AFTER ones. The weight of the BEFORE cutting light response curve has been analytically determined and corresponds to the flux fraction which originates from inside the fence. The experimental estimates of the relative importance of the area inside the fence produced values ranging from 30%, during stable conditions, and up to 80% during unstable conditions. These values derived from observations were later compared with the predictions of three analytical footprint models. One of the models systematically underestimated experimental observations, while observations concurred with the other two, particularly in moderately unstable conditions.
Eddy-covariance
Footprint
Light response curve
Stability
2005
Marcolla, B.; Cescatti, A. (2005). Experimental analysis of flux footprint for varying stability conditions in an alpine meadow. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 135 (1-4): 291-301. doi: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2005.12.007 handle: http://hdl.handle.net/10449/20840
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