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Simulating carbon, water and heat fluxes at the Changbaishan tower site using hourly BEPS. Wang Qiufeng, Yu Guirui. Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research Chinese Academy of Sciences. Outline. Introduction Materials and methods Overview of ChinaFLUX
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Simulating carbon, water and heat fluxes at the Changbaishan tower site using hourly BEPS Wang Qiufeng, Yu Guirui Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research Chinese Academy of Sciences
Outline • Introduction • Materials and methods • Overview of ChinaFLUX • Site description of Changbaishan • Data collection and process • Model description • Preliminary Results • Conclusions
Introduction • Carbon cycle and carbon cycle modeling are of great concerns in recent years • Eddy covariance technique provide a feasible way to model validation • The objective of this research is to validate NEP, LE, and Hs simulated by hourly BEPS with flux data of Changbaishan site from ChinaFLUX
Changbaishan Site description 42°24′0 9″N , 128°05′45″E , elevation 738m Fetch: 500m-60km Height: 62.8 m
Data collection • Flux data Sampling frequency 10Hz Half-hour fluxes are calculated on-line and collected by data logger (CR5000 Campbell, USA). • Meteorological and soil data are collected every 2 s and stored as half-hour statistics (CR23X, Campbell, USA)
Data process • The 3-D Sonic anemometer tilt correction (coordinate rotation) was carried out monthly with the planar fit (PFT) method • Webb–Pearman–Leuning corrections (Webb et al., 1980) was applied to the eddy fluxes.
Data process • Remove carbon flux data beyond the range -1.5<Fc<1.0 mg CO2 m-2 s-1 • Remove nighttime data with a friction velocity less than 0.2 m s-1 • Calculate NEP NEP= - NEE
Statistical comparison of simulated versus measured soil temperatures and soil moistures
NEP simulated and measured for three periods during growing season
LE simulated and measured for 3 periods during growing season
a) b) c) Hs simulated and measured for 3 periods during growing season
Conclusions • The results simulated by hourly version BEPS is reasonable, which suggested that the model could be used to simulate the fluxes of C, water and heat flux in China • Results from sensitivity analysis showed that the model is sensitive to climate variability, meanwhile, plant physiological parameters (gmax and Vmax) are also important
Conclusions • Although the model could capture the main patterns of the variations in NEP, LE and Hs, discrepancy still exists. The causes is still uncertain. • Much work still needs to be done in the future, such as model application in different types of ecosystems
Acknowledgement • Thanks should be given to Prof. Chen J M for giving me the chance to study the BEPS model in UT and his useful advices • I am grateful to the kindly help provided by Dr. Ju W M in model debugging • I appreciate Prof. Shi XZ for providing the soil data