Title of article
Assessing FPAR source and parameter optimization scheme in application of a diagnostic carbon flux model
Author/Authors
Turner، نويسنده , , David P. and Ritts، نويسنده , , William D. and Wharton، نويسنده , , Sonia and Thomas، نويسنده , , Christoph and Monson، نويسنده , , Russell and Black، نويسنده , , T. Andrew and Falk، نويسنده , , Matthias، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
11
From page
1529
To page
1539
Abstract
The combination of satellite remote sensing and carbon cycle models provides an opportunity for regional to global scale monitoring of terrestrial gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, and net ecosystem production. FPAR (the fraction of photosynthetically active radiation absorbed by the plant canopy) is a critical input to diagnostic models, however little is known about the relative effectiveness of FPAR products from different satellite sensors nor about the sensitivity of flux estimates to different parameterization approaches. In this study, we used multiyear observations of carbon flux at four eddy covariance flux tower sites within the conifer biome to evaluate these factors. FPAR products from the MODIS and SeaWiFS sensors, and the effects of single site vs. cross-site parameter optimization were tested with the CFLUX model. The SeaWiFs FPAR product showed greater dynamic range across sites and resulted in slightly reduced flux estimation errors relative to the MODIS product when using cross-site optimization. With site-specific parameter optimization, the flux model was effective in capturing seasonal and interannual variation in the carbon fluxes at these sites. The cross-site prediction errors were lower when using parameters from a cross-site optimization compared to parameter sets from optimization at single sites. These results support the practice of multisite optimization within a biome or ecoregion for parameterization of diagnostic carbon flux models.
Keywords
Diagnostic model , CFLUX , parameter optimization , Gross primary production , ecosystem respiration , FPAR , carbon flux , Net ecosystem exchange
Journal title
Remote Sensing of Environment
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Remote Sensing of Environment
Record number
1629192
Link To Document