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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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Investigating soil moisture-climate interactions in a changing climate: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a synthesis of past research on the role of soil moisture for the climate system, based both on modelling and observational studies, focusing on soil moisture-temperature and soil moistureprecipitation feedbacks, and their possible modifications with climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improvements to a MODIS global terrestrial evapotranspiration algorithm

TL;DR: In this article, an improved version of the global evapotranspiration (ET) algorithm based on MODIS and global meteorology data has been proposed, which simplifies the calculation of vegetation cover fraction, calculating ET as the sum of daytime and nighttime components, adding soil heat flux calculation, improving estimates of stomatal conductance, aerodynamic resistance and boundary layer resistance, separating dry canopy surface from the wet and dividing soil surface into saturated wet surface and moist surface.
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Drought-Induced Reduction in Global Terrestrial Net Primary Production from 2000 Through 2009

TL;DR: Satellite data used to estimate global terrestrial NPP over the past decade found that the earlier trend has been reversed and that NPP has been decreasing, and combined with climate change data suggests that large-scale droughts are responsible for the decline.
Journal ArticleDOI

TRY - a global database of plant traits

Jens Kattge, +136 more
TL;DR: TRY as discussed by the authors is a global database of plant traits, including morphological, anatomical, physiological, biochemical and phenological characteristics of plants and their organs, which can be used for a wide range of research from evolutionary biology, community and functional ecology to biogeography.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A multiyear evaluation of a Dynamic Global Vegetation Model at three AmeriFlux forest sites: Vegetation structure, phenology, soil temperature, and CO2 and H2O vapor exchange

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used eddy-covariance observations of carbon dioxide (CO2) and water vapor exchange at three AmeriFlux mid-latitude forest stands to evaluate IBIS, a Dynamic Global Vegetation Model (DGVM).
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Estimating parameters in a land‐surface model by applying nonlinear inversion to eddy covariance flux measurements from eight FLUXNET sites

TL;DR: In this paper, a process-based, land-surface model (CSIRO Biosphere Model) using nonlinear parameter estimation techniques was used to estimate the maximum photosynthetic carboxylation rate (vcmax;25), the potential photosynthesis electron transport rate (jmax,25), and basal soil respiration (rs,25) at a reference temperature of 251C.
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Ecosystem‐atmosphere exchange of carbon dioxide over a mixed hardwood forest in northern lower Michigan

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report results from the first 3 years (1999-2001) of long-term measurements of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) at an AmeriFlux site over a mixed hardwood forest in northern lower Michigan.
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The carbon uptake of a mid latitude pine forest growing on sandy soil

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe measurements of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) over a temperate coniferous forest in The Netherlands and show no loss of night-time fluxes at low values of friction velocity.
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Growing season carbon dioxide exchange in irrigated and rainfed maize

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured and compared net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) in maize-based agroecosystems in eastern Nebraska, USA, during the growing season in 2001.
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