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Anders Lindroth

Professor

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Two-level eddy covariance measurements reduce bias in land-atmosphere exchange estimates over a heterogeneous boreal forest landscape

Author

  • Anne Klosterhalfen
  • Jinshu Chi
  • Natascha Kljun
  • Anders Lindroth
  • Hjalmar Laudon
  • Mats B. Nilsson
  • Matthias Peichl

Summary, in English

Estimates of land-atmosphere exchanges of carbon, energy, water vapor, and other greenhouse gases based on the eddy covariance (EC) technique rely on the fundamental assumption that the flux footprint area is homogeneous. We investigated the impact of source area heterogeneity on flux estimates in single-level EC measurements over a managed boreal forest landscape. For this purpose, we compared single-level measurements with those from a two-level approach consisting of concurrent EC measurements at 60 and 85 m above the ground. This two-level set-up provided a unique opportunity to obtain nearly congruent diel footprint areas by combining data from the higher and lower levels during day- and nighttime, respectively. We found that the variation in the averaged footprint area between day- and nighttime was reduced by up to 89% in the two-level approach compared to the single-level data at the higher level (85 m). Considering spring, summer, and fall months, the resulting relative potential bias in flux observations due to landscape heterogeneity was highest at short time steps (≤ daily) ranging between 35% and 325% for half-hourly data. During winter months, when stable atmospheric regimes prevailed during day and night, the footprints within the diel course nearly overlapped also at a given single level and hence no improvement of flux estimates was found. The absolute cumulated sums for the study period (excluding winter months) of gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, latent heat, and sensible heat flux were underestimated by about 28%, 52%, 5%, and 3%, respectively, whereas that of net ecosystem CO2 exchange was overestimated by about 109% in the single-level approach. Overall this study suggests that footprint heterogeneity may introduce considerable bias in single-level flux estimates — particularly at short time scales — with large implications for model-data fusion studies, site comparisons, and up- or downscaling of land-atmosphere exchange processes.

Department/s

  • LTH Profile Area: Aerosols
  • Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
  • Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science

Publishing year

2023-08-15

Language

English

Publication/Series

Agricultural and Forest Meteorology

Volume

339

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Environmental Sciences

Keywords

  • Footprint model FFP
  • Heterogeneous landscape
  • Latent heat flux
  • Net ecosystem CO exchange
  • Sensible heat flux
  • Tall tower eddy covariance

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0168-1923