Fig. 1. The three towers facilitating studies on forest ecology and management over the watershed of Qingyuan Forest CERN (China Ecology Research Network, Chinese Academy of Sciences) are located inside three forest sites categorized as natural mixed broadleaf deciduous forest (the left nearest tower), natural Mongolian oak forest (the right tower), and planted larch forest (the farthest tower). The three forests represent the three major types of secondary forest ecosystems in northeast China.
Fig. 1. The three towers facilitating studies on forest ecology and management over the watershed of Qingyuan Forest CERN (China Ecology Research Network, Chinese Academy of Sciences) are located inside three forest sites categorized as natural mixed broadleaf deciduous forest (the left nearest tower), natural Mongolian oak forest (the right tower), and planted larch forest (the farthest tower). The three forests represent the three major types of secondary forest ecosystems in northeast China.
Fig. 1. The three towers facilitating studies on forest ecology and management over the watershed of Qingyuan Forest CERN (China Ecology Research Network, Chinese Academy of Sciences) are located inside three forest sites categorized as natural mixed broadleaf deciduous forest (the left nearest tower), natural Mongolian oak forest (the right tower), and planted larch forest (the farthest tower). The three forests represent the three major types of secondary forest ecosystems in northeast China.
Fig. 2. The CPEC 310 (a and c) and AP200 (b and d) installed in a tower facilitating the studies on forest ecology and management over the watershed of Qingyuan
Forest CERN (China Ecology Research Network, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Fig. 3 Micrometeorology sensors: (a) CNR4 four-component radiometer with CNF4 ventilation and heating accessories, (b) sensor assembly for soil heat flux, along with soil moisture and temperature profiles, (c) 52202 rain gauge, and SI-111 infrared radiometer outside (d1) and inside (d2) forest
Fig. 4. CAS-CSI Joint Laboratory of Research and Development for Monitoring Forest Fluxes of Trace Gases and Isotope Elements (a) and some team members (b)

This case study discusses the integration of CPEC310 and AP200 systems to explore the theories and techniques of measuring CO2/H2O/trace-gas fluxes over heterogeneous landscapes in the Chinese Academy of Sciences Qingyuan Forest CERN laboratory.

CPEC310 (closed-path eddy-covariance systems) and AP200 (atmospheric profile systems), along with micrometeorological sensors, nitrate-related trace-gas analyzers, and soil-surface CO2 flux systems, have been integrated into three 50-meter-tall towers facilitating studies on forest ecology and management in the Chinese Academy of Sciences Qingyuan Forest CERN Field Laboratory (Fig. 1). (CERN is the China Ecology Research Network.) Taking advantage of new developments in the CPEC and AP systems from Campbell Scientific, the integrated network of systems is a state-of-the-art design to explore the theories and techniques of measuring CO2/H2O/trace-gas fluxes over mountain forests (i.e., heterogeneous landscapes). It does this while collecting long-term data of the fluxes over Qingyuan Forest CERN watershed covered with the three types of forests (natural mixed broadleaf deciduous forest, natural Mongolian oak forest, and larch plantation forest) that are most common in northeast China.

Qingyuan Forest CERN CAS

Qingyuan Forest CERN is a field laboratory directly supported by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and is administrated principally by the Institute of Applied Ecology (IAE), CAS. It is open internationally for collaborations among ecologists, meteorologists, and hydrologists on forestry. Dr. Jiaojun Zhu is the director of Qingyuan Forest CERN, while also being the director general of IAE, CAS. Having his philosophy of research in field forests representative to most cases (e.g., mountain forests over heterogeneous landscapes, Fig. 1), he chose a mountain watershed covered with natural mixed broadleaf, natural oak, and planted larch forests as a practical field of Qingyuan Forest CERN. In 2003, he designed and established this field laboratory to be comprehensive enough for major projects in forest ecology and management, as well as the resulting environmental influences. These projects are funded by China National Science Foundation, CAS, and the China Council of Sciences and Technology. Now, dozens of projects with annual support of millions in US dollars are running here. Long-term, quality data to quantify the exchange of CO2/H2O and nitrogen-related trace gases between forest ecosystems and the atmosphere (i.e., fluxes over forests) as influenced by forest growth and development under human disturbance are indispensable in this laboratory (Zhu et al. 2018).

Integration of CPEC310 and AP200 systems with other sensors

The field of mountain forests in Qingyuan Forest CERN over a heterogeneous landscape theoretically challenges the techniques of measuring fluxes that are commonly applicable to homogeneous landscapes. Requiring data to be as continuous as possible in time series with quality, the major objective of Qingyuan Forest CERN instrumentally challenges the flux measurement equipment systems in their quality and functionalities as well. For the three towers, both challenges led to a choice of integration of the CPEC310 and the AP200 as state-of-the-art, major components. Also chosen were research-grade micrometeorological sensors, nitrate- related trace-gas analyzers durable in various weather conditions, and soil CO2 flux systems compatible with CPEC310 and AP200 in system control and data sharing.

CPEC310

CPEC310 is a newly released CPEC system (Fig. 2a and 2c) from Campbell Scientific. Its CO2/H2O flux measurements are the benchmark used to assess the same measurements by an open-path eddy-covariance (OPEC) system (Helbig et al. 2016). Compared with other CPEC systems, it has the fast response of 4.2 Hz cutoff frequency (Ma et al. 2017), less consumption of power, and consistent performance in various weather conditions (Novick et al. 2013). Compared to its OPEC counterpart, it measures the temperature and pressure of measured air flows more accurately in better synchronization by thermo-equilibrium design. This avoids the measurement errors incurred in an OPEC system in which pressure is assumed to be static for WPL correction (Webb et al. 1980, Zhang et al. 2011), and the temperature for the correction of the spectroscopic effect on CO2/H2O signals at high frequency (e.g., 10 Hz) is measured using a conventional, slower sensor (e.g., a model 107 probe. Wang et al. 2016b).

More importantly, the CPEC310 has two distinguishing advantages:

  1. Functionality of auto-zero/span set at a user-defined time interval. This functionality regularly (via user settings) adjusts the zero and span parameters in the working equation of a CO2/H2O analyzer (LI-COR Biosciences 2016) to fit the temperature near which the system is running, which technically improves the accuracies of measurements for CO2/H2O fluxes.
  2. EasyFlux-DL-CR6CP software. This software controls and operates the measurements and auto-zero/span while processing the data as to the specifications the flux community has adopted.

AP200

The AP200, manufactured by Campbell Scientific, (Fig. 2b and 2d) is the atmospheric profile system to measure CO2/H2O, air temperature, and relative humidity at up to eight height levels, with their vertical distribution arranged by users. It is commonly used in connection with an eddy-covariance system. In this case, it was integrated with the CPEC310. Over an averaging interval used in CPEC310 for flux computation, its data from different levels are used to calculate the individual changes in CO2/H2O and heat storages between biosphere and atmosphere over the profile up to the CPEC310 level (i.e., control volume). The changes are the increases/decreases in the storage inside the control volume, as such, being termed as storage terms. The amount of these terms depends on the interactions of boundary-layer stratifications with species composition, vegetative surface and volume densities, and their spatial distributions inside the canopy. In flux computation, therefore, the integration of these storage terms based on fast response profile system with fluxes measured by a CPEC310 can greatly improve the reliability in an estimation of flux and even net ecosystem exchange (NEE, Wang et al. 2016a). This has been advocated recently by the International Carbon Observatory System to standardize the methodology for the storage term measurements to the system infrastructure (Montagnani et al. 2018).

Similar to the CPEC310, the AP200 also has two distinguishing advantages:

  1. Functionality of auto-zero/span
  2. EasyFlux-DL-CR1KXAP software (under development)

The software is adaptable and, for this case study, it was modified to accommodate a vertical profile of cup anemometers (model: 010C, Met One Instrument, OR) and soil moisture and temperature measurements (models: CS655, TCAV, Campbell Scientific, UT). These additions enable the AP200 to measure more variables of interest for comprehensive analyses.

Micrometeorology sensors

Each tower was equipped with the following sensors: a CNR4 four-component radiometer (Kipp & Zonen, Amsterdam) measures incoming and outgoing radiation (longwave and shortwave) over the forest canopy (Fig. 3a); three replications of HFP01SC self-calibrated soil heat-flux plates (Hukseflux Thermal Sensors, Delft), TCAV, and CS655 measure soil heat flux, along with soil moisture and temperature profiles (Fig. 3b for one replication); SI-111 infrared radiometers measure surface temperature inside (Fig. 3d2) and outside canopy (Fig. 3d1); and a 52202 rain gauge (R. M. Young Company, MI) measures precipitation (Fig. 3c).

Soil CO2 flux system and trace-gas flux system

Each tower was equipped with the following sensors: a soil surface CO2 flux system compatible with CPEC310 and AP200 in system control and data sharing has been designed for CO2 efflux from forest floor, and trace-gas analysis (TGA) (Campbell Scientific, UT) has been scheduled for the fluxes of nitrogen-related trace gases. The trace-gas flux will be used to address the nutrient cycles in the three forest types and environmental interactions between agricultural and forest ecosystems.

Full options, research grade, and integration

Full options, when available, were chosen for all systems installed in the three towers. CPEC310 has its options of valve and scrub modules for its best performance in auto-zero/span; AP200 has its option of a zero gas bottle along with the maximum number of sampling intakes for its most reliable measurements; CNR4 has its option of CNF4 to acquire better data in evening, low wind, and moist conditions; and 52202 rain gauge has its option of a heating accessory for data availability in the winter season.

All sensors installed in the three towers are research grade for ecology. The CNR4 is a high-end, four-component radiometer; HFP01SC is the only soil heat flux plate with self-calibration capability for forests; and 52202 rain gauge is a top-quality choice for attaching to the towers.

All the measurement systems and sensors are integrated into a whole system. The data from the CPEC310 are designed to be shared online by the AP200, the soil-surface CO2 flux system, and the trace-gas system, and eventually to compute the values of variables at an ecosystem level (e.g., NEE). This computation can be summarized by the CR1000X Datalogger in the AP200. The summary can be a core data file robust enough for the use of most research topics on forest ecology and management.

Challenge, advantage, and perspective

For flux measurements and related studies, mountain forests in Qingyuan Forest CERN over a heterogeneous landscape is challenging, and the state-of-the-art design in an integration of CPEC310 and AP200 along with other quality sensors is an advantage. Facing the challenge and taking this advantage, the CAS-CSI Joint Laboratory of Research and Development for Monitoring Forest Fluxes of Trace Gases and Isotope Elements (Ker Joint Laboratory) (Fig. 4) has been established. This laboratory organizes scientists from the Institute of Applied Ecology, other institutes under CAS, Campbell Scientific, Campbell Scientific (Beijing) Company Limited, Shenyang Agricultural University, Northeast Forestry University, Beijing Techno Solutions Limited, and foreign visiting scientists as a team (Fig. 4b).

While collecting long-term data, this team mainly focuses on the three tasks: (1) development of theories and techniques to measure the fluxes of CO2/H2O and nitrogen-related gases over mountain forests of the three types; (2) research education for masters and Ph.D. candidates and postdoctoral fellows, as well; and (3) applications of new developments in CO2/H2O and trace-gas flux systems from Campbell Scientific.

The team would project three perspectives: (1) provide long-term data concerning fluxes and the environment as influenced separately by the three types of forests at an ecosystem scale, supporting all research projects conducted in the Qingyuan Forest CERN; (2) improve theories and techniques to measure fluxes of atmospheric constituents over heterogeneous landscapes; and (3) demonstrate the integration of the CPEC310 and AP200 to the China flux community as the best choice for future CERN updates of flux measurement systems.


Contributor Information

  • Ning Zheng: Campbell Scientific (Beijing) Company Limited, CAS-CSI Joint Laboratory of Research and Development for Monitoring Forest Fluxes of Trace Gases and Isotope Elements (Ker Joint Laboratory)
  • Emily Fu: Campbell Scientific (Beijing) Company Limited
  • Tian Gao: Qingyuan Forest CERN, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences; CAS-CSI Joint Laboratory of Research and Development for Monitoring Forest Fluxes of Trace Gases and Isotope Elements (Ker Joint Laboratory)
  • Fengyuan Yu: Qingyuan Forest CERN, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences; CAS-CSI Joint Laboratory of Research and Development for Monitoring Forest Fluxes of Trace Gases and Isotope Elements (Ker Joint Laboratory)

References

Helbig, M, K Wischnewski, GH Gosselin, SC Biraud, I Bogoev, WS Chan, ES Euskirchen, AJ Glenn, PM Marsh, WL Quinton, O Sonnentag. 2016. Addressing a systematic bias in carbon dioxide flux measurements with the EC150 and the IRGASON open-path gas analyzers. Agr For Meteorol 228-229: 349-359.

LI-COR Biosciences. 2016. LI-7500RS Open path CO2/H2O Gas Analyzer: Instruction Manual. Lincoln NE. p. 4-1 to 4-11 and 8-1 to 8-9.

Ma, JY, TS Zha, X Jia, S Sargent, R Burgon, CA Bourque, XH Zhou, WJ Chen, YJ Bai, P Liu, YJ Wu. 2017. An innovative eddy-covariance system with vortex intake for measuring carbon dioxide and water fluxes of ecosystems. Atmos Meas Tech 10: 1259-1267.

Montagnani, L, T Crűnwald, A Kowalski, I Mammarella, L Merbold, S Metzger, P Sedlák, L Siebicke. 2018. Estimating the storage term in eddy covariance measurements: the ICOS methodology. International Agrophysics 32: 551-567.

Novick, KA, J Walker, WS Chan, A Schmidt, C Sobek, JM Vose. 2013. Eddy covariance measurements with a new fast-response, enclosed-path analyzer: Spectral characteristics and cross-system comparison. Agr For Meteorol 181: 17-32.

Wang, X, C Wang, Q Guo, J Wang. 2016a. Improving the CO2 storage measurements with a single profile system in a tall-dense-canopy temperate forest. Agr For Meteorol 228: 327-338.

Wang, W, JP Xu, YQ Gao, I Bogoev, J Cui, LC Deng, C Hu, C Liu, SD Liu, J Shen, XM Sun, W Xiao, GF Yuan, XH Lee. 2016b. Performance evaluation of an integrated open-path eddy covariance system in a cold desert environment. J Atmos Oceanic Techn 33: 2385-2399.

Webb, EK, GI Pearman, R Leuning. 1980. Correction of flux measurements for density effects due to heat and water vapour transfer. Q J Royal Mete Soc 106: 85-100.

Zhang, JH, XH Lee, GZ Song, SJ Han. 2011. Pressure correction to the long-term measurement of carbon dioxide flux. Agr For Meteorol 151: 70-77.

Zhu JJ, QL Yan, LZ Yu, JX Zhang, K Yang, T Gao. 2018. Support Ecological Restoration and Sustainable Management of Forests in Northeast China Based on Research of Forest Ecology and Demonstrations. Bulletin of Chinese Academy of Sciences, 33: 107-118.

Case Study Summary

Application

Flux studies over mountain forests (heterogeneous landscapes)

Location

Northeast China

Products Used

CS655  CPEC310  AP200  CNR4-L  SI-111  52202-L  TCAV-L  HFP01SC-L 

Contributors

Ning Zheng, Emily Fu, Tian Gao, Fengyuan Yu

Participating Organizations

Qingyuan Forest CERN, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Ker Joint Laboratory

Measured Parameters

Fluxes of CO2, H2O, and nitrate-related trace gases; profiles of air temperature, air moisture, CO2, wind speed, soil moisture, soil temperature; CO2 and H2O storage terms; energy terms; net ecosystem exchange


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