I will describe some of the observational approaches we have deployed to measure the net rate of carbon dioxide exchange between a forest ecosystem and the atmosphere. The observed net exchange of CO₂ represents the sum of several components of gross CO₂ exchange, which in turn represent fundamental tree and soil metabolic processes. One challenge we have had is: how do we extract insight about how these component processes might be responding to environmental change at various scales from an observed time series? I will discuss some of our experiences with statistical- and process-based models as we apply them to our several-year record of forest CO₂ exchange, and use these applications to extract insight about ecosystem processes. I will briefly describe how one such approach – model-data assimilation and posterior parameter estimation – might be applied to a time series extracted from the tree ring record, and used to inform us about the integration of both phenotypic and environmental influences on tree ring structure and isotopic composition.
Extracting insight on forest carbon cycles through observations and modeling
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 - 12:00 to 13:00
Access:
public
Room:
Speaker:
Russ Monson
Affiliation:
LTRR & SNRE
Contact:
Valerie Trouet