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Simulation of CO2 exchange between forest canopy and atmosphere

DIAO Yiwei1,2; WANG Anzhi1; JIN Changjie1; GUAN Dexin1;PEI Tiefan1   

  1. 1Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016, China;
    2College of Applied Meteorology, Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, Nanjing 210044, China
  • Received:2005-12-29 Revised:2006-09-23 Online:2006-12-18 Published:2006-12-18

Abstract: Estimating the scalar source/sink distribution of CO2 and its vertical fluxes within and above forest canopy continues to be a critical research problem in biosphere-atmosphere exchange processes and plant ecology. With broadleaved Korean pine forest in Changbai Mountains as test object, and based on Raupach’s localized near field theory, the source/sink and vertical flux distribution of CO2 within and above forest canopy were modeled through an inverse Lagrangian dispersion analysis. This model correctly predicted a strong positive CO2 source strength in the deeper layers of the canopy due to soil-plant respiration, and a strong CO2 sink in the upper layers of the canopy due to the assimilation by sunlit foliage. The foliage in the top layer of canopy changed from a CO2 source in the morning to a CO2 sink in the afternoon, while the soil constituted a strong CO2 source all the day. The simulation results accorded well with the eddy covariance CO2 flux measurements within and above the canopy, and the average precision was 89%. The CO2 exchange predicted by the analysis was averagely 15% higher than that of the eddy correlation, but exhibited identical temporal trend. Atmospheric stability remarkably affected the CO2 exchange between forest canopy and atmosphere.