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Error characterization of methane fluxes and budgets derived from a long-term comparison of open- and closed-path eddy covariance systems.
Deventer, M Julian; Griffis, Timothy J; Roman, D Tyler; Kolka, Randall K; Wood, Jeffrey D; Erickson, Matt; Baker, John M; Millet, Dylan B.
Afiliação
  • Deventer MJ; University of Minnesota - Dept. Soil, Water & Climate, United States.
  • Griffis TJ; University of Minnesota - Dept. Soil, Water & Climate, United States.
  • Roman DT; US Forest Service - Northern Research Station Grand Rapids, United States.
  • Kolka RK; US Forest Service - Northern Research Station Grand Rapids, United States.
  • Wood JD; University of Missouri - School of Natural Resources, United States.
  • Erickson M; University of Minnesota - Dept. Soil, Water & Climate, United States.
  • Baker JM; University of Minnesota - Dept. Soil, Water & Climate, United States.
  • Millet DB; US Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service, United States.
Agric For Meteorol ; 2782019 Nov 15.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33612901
ABSTRACT
Wetlands represent the dominant natural source of methane (CH4) to the atmosphere. Thus, substantial effort has been spent examining the CH4 budgets of global wetlands via continuous ecosystem-scale measurements using the eddy covariance (EC) technique. Robust error characterization for such measurements, however, remains a major challenge. Here, we quantify systematic, random and gap-filling errors and the resulting uncertainty in CH4 fluxes using a 3.5 year time series of simultaneous open- and closed path CH4 flux measurements over a sub-boreal wetland. After correcting for high- and low frequency flux attenuation, the magnitude of systematic frequency response errors were negligible relative to other uncertainties. Based on three different random flux error estimations, we found that errors of the CH4 flux measurement systems were smaller in magnitude than errors associated with the turbulent transport and flux footprint heterogeneity. Errors on individual half-hourly CH4 fluxes were typically 6%-41%, but not normally distributed (leptokurtic), and thus need to be appropriately characterized when fluxes are compared to chamber-derived or modeled CH4 fluxes. Integrated annual fluxes were only moderately sensitive to gap-filling, based on an evaluation of 4 different methods. Calculated budgets agreed on average to within 7% (≤ 1.5 g - CH4 m-2 yr-1). Marginal distribution sampling using open source code was among the best-performing of all the evaluated gap-filling approaches and it is therefore recommended given its transparency and reproducibility. Overall, estimates of annual CH4 emissions for both EC systems were in excellent agreement (within 0.6 g - CH4 m-2 yr-1) and averaged 18 g - CH4 m-2 yr-1. Total uncertainties on the annual fluxes were larger than the uncertainty of the flux measurement systems and estimated between 7-17%. Identifying trends and differences among sites or site years requires that the observed variability exceeds these uncertainties.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Health_economic_evaluation Idioma: En Revista: Agric For Meteorol Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Health_economic_evaluation Idioma: En Revista: Agric For Meteorol Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos