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Continuous long-term measurements of soil-plant-atmosphere variables at an agricultural site

Authors :
Halldin, Sven
Bergström, Hans
Gustafsson, D.
Dahlgren, L.
Hjelm, P.
Lundin, Lars-Christer
Mellander, P. E.
Nord, Tomas
Jansson, P. E.
Seibert, Jan
Stähli, M.
Szilágyi Kishné, A.
Smedman, Ann-Sofi
Halldin, Sven
Bergström, Hans
Gustafsson, D.
Dahlgren, L.
Hjelm, P.
Lundin, Lars-Christer
Mellander, P. E.
Nord, Tomas
Jansson, P. E.
Seibert, Jan
Stähli, M.
Szilágyi Kishné, A.
Smedman, Ann-Sofi
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

It is a major challenge in modem science to decrease the uncertainty in predictions of global climate change. One of the largest uncertainties in present-day global climate models resides with the understanding of processes in the soil-vegetation-atmosphere-transfer (SVAT) system. Continuous, long-term data are needed to correctly quantify balances of water, energy and CO2 in this system and to correctly model them. It is the objective of this paper to demonstrate how a combined system of existing sensor, computer, and network technologies could be set up to provide continuous and reliable long-term SVAT-process data from an agricultural site under almost all weather conditions. A long-term climate-monitoring system within the framework of NOPEX was set up in 1993-1994 at the Marsta Meteorological Observatory (MMO). It is situated in a flat agricultural area where annual crops are cultivated on a heavy clay soil. It has successfully monitored relevant states and fluxes in the system, such as atmospheric fluxes of momentum, heat, water vapour and CO2, atmospheric profiles of wind speed, direction, and temperature, short- and long-wave radiation, soil temperature, soil-water contents, groundwater levels, and rainfall and snow depth. System uptime has been more than 90% for most of its components during the first 5 years of operation. Results from the first 5 years of operation has proven MMO to be an ideal site for intercomparison and intercalibration of radiometers and fast turbulence sensors, and for evaluation of other sensors, e.g., rain gauges. The long time series of radiation data have been valuable to establish numerical limits for a set of quality-control flags. MMO has served as a boundary-layer research station and results from NOPEX campaigns show how the dimensionless wind gradient depends not only on the traditional stability parameter z/L but also on the height of the convective boundary layer. Measurements at the observatory grounds and a neighbouring

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1235095124
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.S0168-1923(99)00149-5