Marko Scholze
Senior lecturer
Observing the continental-scale carbon balance: assessment of sampling complementarity and redundancy in a terrestrial assimilation system by means of quantitative network design
Author
Summary, in English
This paper investigates the relationship between the heterogeneity of the terrestrial carbon cycle and the optimal design of observing networks to constrain it. We combine the methods of quantitative network design and carbon-cycle data assimilation to a hierarchy of increasingly heterogeneous descriptions of the European terrestrial biosphere as indicated by increasing diversity of plant functional types. We employ three types of observations, flask measurements of CO2 concentrations, continuous measurements of CO2 and pointwise measurements of CO2 flux. We show that flux measurements are extremely efficient for relatively homogeneous situations but not robust against increasing or unknown complexity. Here a hybrid approach is necessary, and we recommend its use in the development of integrated carbon observing systems.
Publishing year
2012
Language
English
Pages
7867-7879
Publication/Series
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume
12
Issue
16
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Topic
- Physical Geography
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1680-7324