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Energy balance closure at FLUXNET sites revisited.

Authors :
Mauder, Matthias
Jung, Martin
Stoy, Paul
Nelson, Jacob
Wanner, Luise
Source :
Agricultural & Forest Meteorology. Nov2024, Vol. 358, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• We revisit the topic of energy balance closure for FLUXNET sites and provides an update of techniques that are currently being developed. • We explain and quantify factors that affect energy balance closure when using eddy-covariance measurements. • Implications that the imbalance may cause on regional to global terrestrial assessments on heat and water vapour fluxes are discussed. The FLUXNET network with numerous eddy covariance stations distributed worldwide is an important backbone for the study of ecosystem-atmosphere interactions. In order to provide reliable data for a variety of related research fields all parts of the ecosystem-atmosphere interactions need to be fully captured. Energy balance closure can be an indicator that all fluxes are fully recorded. However, in an investigation of the FLUXNET data set over 20 years ago, a systematic imbalance of around 20 % was observed in the surface energy balance. By improving measurement instruments and arrangements as well as data post-processing, the imbalance was reduced to about 15 % within the following ten years. We show that the remaining imbalance has hardly changed to this day. In the meantime, it has become clear that the energy transport through mesoscale secondary circulations, which by definition cannot be captured with single-tower eddy covariance measurements, accounts for a large proportion of the remaining imbalance and leads to an underestimation of atmospheric energy fluxes. Storage changes, which have so far only been partially recorded, were also found to strongly contribute to the imbalance. In addition to recommendations for improving storage change measurements, we therefore present various energy balance closure approaches. These can be used to complement FLUXNET measurements by accounting for those flux contributions that cannot be captured by single-tower measurements or to parameterize the transport by secondary circulations in numerical weather and climate models. Another important finding in energy balance closure research is that secondary circulations contribute not only to energy transport but also to the transport of CO 2 and other substances, but more research is needed in this area. We conclude that research into energy balance closure problem has made great progress in recent years, which is crucial for investigating the role of ecosystems in the Earth system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01681923
Volume :
358
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Agricultural & Forest Meteorology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180422220
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agrformet.2024.110235