Pd. Blanken et al., ENERGY-BALANCE AND CANOPY CONDUCTANCE OF A BOREAL ASPEN FOREST - PARTITIONING OVERSTORY AND UNDERSTORY COMPONENTS, J GEO RES-A, 102(D24), 1997, pp. 28915-28927
The energy balance components were measured throughout most of 1994 in
and above a southern boreal aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) forest
(53.629 degrees N 106.200 degrees W) with a hazelnut (Corylus cornuta
Marsh.) understory as part of the Boreal Ecosystem-Atmosphere Study.
The turbulent fluxes were measured at both levels using the eddy-covar
iance technique. After rejection of suspect data due to instationarity
or inhomogeneity, occasional erratic behavior in turbulent fluxes and
lack of energy balance closure led to a recalculation of the fluxes o
f sensible and latent heat using their ratio and the available energy.
The seasonal development in leaf area was reflected in a strong seaso
nal pattern of the energy balance. Leaf growth began during the third
week of May with a maximum forest leaf area index of 5.6 m(2) m(-2) re
ached by mid-July. During the full-leaf period, aspen and hazelnut acc
ounted for approximately 40 and 60% of the forest leaf area, respectiv
ely. Sensible heat was the dominant consumer of forest net radiation d
uring the preleaf period, while latent heat accounted for the majority
of forest net radiation during the leafed period. Hazelnut transpirat
ion accounted for 25% of the forest transpiration during the summer mo
nths. During the full-leaf period (June 1 to September 7) daytime dry-
canopy mean aspen and hazelnut canopy conductances were 330 mmol m(-2)
s(-1) (8.4 mm s(-1)) (70% of the total forest conductance) and 113 mm
ol m(-2) s(-1) (2.9 mm s(-1)) (24% of the total forest conductance), r
espectively. Maximum aspen and hazelnut canopy conductances were 1200
mmol m(-2) s(-1) (30 mm s(-1)) and 910 mmol m(-2) s(-1) (23 mm s(-1)),
respectively, and maximum stomatal conductances were 490 mmol m(-2) s
(-1) (12.5 mm s(-1)) and 280 mmol m(-2) s(-1) (7 mm s(-1)), aspen and
hazelnut, respectively. Both species showed a decrease in canopy condu
ctance as the saturation deficit increased and both showed an increase
in canopy conductance as the photosynthetic active radiation increase
d. There was a linear relationship between forest leaf area index and
forest canopy conductance. The timing, duration, and maximum leaf area
of this deciduous boreal forest was found to be an important control
on transpiration at both levels of the canopy. The full-leaf hazelnut
daytime mean Priestly and Taylor [1972] alpha coefficient of 1.22. ind
icated transpiration was largely energy controlled and the quantity of
energy received at the hazelnut surface was a function of aspen leaf
area. The full-leaf aspen daytime mean alpha of 0.91 indicated some st
omatal control on transpiration, with a directly proportional relation
ship between forest leaf area and forest canopy conductance, varying a
lpha during much of the season through a range very sensitive to regio
nal scale transpiration and surface-convective boundary layer feedback
s.