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The Simulation of the Opposing Fluxes of Latent Heat and CO over Various Land-Use Types: Coupling a Gas Exchange Model to a Mesoscale Atmospheric Model.

Authors :
Reyers, Mark
Krüger, Andreas
Werner, Christiane
Pinto, Joaquim
Zacharias, Stefan
Kerschgens, Michael
Source :
Boundary-Layer Meteorology. Apr2011, Vol. 139 Issue 1, p121-141. 21p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 8 Graphs, 2 Maps.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

mesoscale meteorological model (FOOT3DK) is coupled with a gas exchange model to simulate surface fluxes of CO and HO under field conditions. The gas exchange model consists of a C3 single leaf photosynthesis sub-model and an extended big leaf (sun/shade) sub-model that divides the canopy into sunlit and shaded fractions. Simulated CO fluxes of the stand-alone version of the gas exchange model correspond well to eddy-covariance measurements at a test site in a rural area in the west of Germany. The coupled FOOT3DK/gas exchange model is validated for the diurnal cycle at singular grid points, and delivers realistic fluxes with respect to their order of magnitude and to the general daily course. Compared to the Jarvis-based big leaf scheme, simulations of latent heat fluxes with a photosynthesis-based scheme for stomatal conductance are more realistic. As expected, flux averages are strongly influenced by the underlying land cover. While the simulated net ecosystem exchange is highly correlated with leaf area index, this correlation is much weaker for the latent heat flux. Photosynthetic CO uptake is associated with transpirational water loss via the stomata, and the resulting opposing surface fluxes of CO and HO are reproduced with the model approach. Over vegetated surfaces it is shown that the coupling of a photosynthesis-based gas exchange model with the land-surface scheme of a mesoscale model results in more realistic simulated latent heat fluxes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068314
Volume :
139
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Boundary-Layer Meteorology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
59259559
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10546-010-9574-0