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Journal ArticleDOI

‘Breathing’ of the terrestrial biosphere: lessons learned from a global network of carbon dioxide flux measurement systems

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TLDR
Key findings reported include: ecosystems with the greatest net carbon uptake have the longest growing season, not the greatest FA; many old-growth forests act as carbon sinks; and year-to-year decreases in FN are attributed to a suite of stresses that decrease FA and FR in tandem.
Abstract
Published eddy covariance measurements of carbon dioxide (CO2) exchange between vegetation and the atmosphere from a global network are distilled, synthesised and reviewed according to time scale, climate and plant functional types, disturbance and land use. Other topics discussed include history of the network, errors and issues associated with the eddy covariance method, and a synopsis of how these data are being used by ecosystem and climate modellers and the remote-sensing community. Spatial and temporal differences in net annual exchange, FN, result from imbalances in canopy photosynthesis (FA) and ecosystem respiration (FR), which scale closely with one another on annual time scales. Key findings reported include the following: (1) ecosystems with the greatest net carbon uptake have the longest growing season, not the greatest FA; (2) ecosystems losing carbon were recently disturbed; (3) many old-growth forests act as carbon sinks; and (4) year-to-year decreases in FN are attributed to a suite of stresses that decrease FA and FR in tandem. Short-term flux measurements revealed emergent-scale processes including (1) the enhancement of light use efficiency by diffuse light, (2) dynamic pulses in FR following rain and (3) the acclimation FA and FR to temperature. They also quantify how FA and FR respond to droughts and heat spells.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Remotely Sensed Global Terrestrial Drought Severity Index

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a method to generate a near-real-time remotely sensed drought severity index (DSI) to monitor and detect drought globally at 1-km spatial resolution and regular 8-day, monthly, and annual frequencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of remote sensing based actual evapotranspiration estimation

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes the basic theories underpinning current remote sensing based evapotranspiration estimation methods and compares their advantages and limitations, and identifies several key directions for further study, including identification of uncertainty sources in remote sensing evapOTranspiration models, merging of different remote sensing methods, application of data assimilation and fusion techniques, and utilization of multi-source remote sensing data and latest sensor technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of spring phenology on seasonal and annual carbon balance in two contrasting New England forests

TL;DR: All phenological measures, including CO(2) source-sink transition dates, could be well predicted on the basis of a simple two-parameter spring warming model, indicating good potential for improving the representation of phenological transitions and their dynamic responsiveness to climate variability in land surface models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observing terrestrial ecosystems and the carbon cycle from space

TL;DR: The spatial distribution of in situ data for carbon fluxes, stocks and plant traits globally is analyzed and the potential of remote sensing to observe these quantities is evaluated, with satellite observations providing the dense sampling in space and time required to characterize the heterogeneity of ecosystem structure and function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Globally rising soil heterotrophic respiration over recent decades.

TL;DR: Observational evidence that global RH is rising is provided, probably in response to environmental changes, consistent with meta-analyses13–16 and long-term experiments, suggesting that climate-driven losses of soil carbon are occurring worldwide.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Strategy of Ecosystem Development

TL;DR: The principles of ecological succession bear importantly on the relationships between man and nature and needs to be examined as a basis for resolving man’s present environmental crisis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate Extremes: Observations, Modeling, and Impacts

TL;DR: Results of observational studies suggest that in many areas that have been analyzed, changes in total precipitation are amplified at the tails, and changes in some temperature extremes have been observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correction of flux measurements for density effects due to heat and water vapour transfer

TL;DR: In this article, the basic relationships are discussed in the context of vertical transfer in the lower atmosphere, and the required corrections to the measured flux are derived, where the correction to measurements of water vapour flux will often be only a few per cent but will sometimes exceed 10 percent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aerosols, climate, and the hydrological cycle

TL;DR: Human activities are releasing tiny particles (aerosols) into the atmosphere that enhance scattering and absorption of solar radiation, which can lead to a weaker hydrological cycle, which connects directly to availability and quality of fresh water, a major environmental issue of the 21st century.
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