Daily and seasonal fluxes of carbon dioxide and water vapor above a north A
ustralian savanna were recorded over a complete dry season-wet season annua
l cycle using the eddy covariance technique. Wet season rates of photosynth
esis and transpiration were larger than those measured in the dry season an
d were dominated by the presence of the grassy understory. As the dry seaso
n progressed and the grass understory died, ecosystem rates of assimilation
and water vapor flux declined substantially. By the end of the dry season,
canopy assimilation and evapotranspiration rates were 20-25% of wet season
values. Assimilation was light saturated in the dry season but not in the
wet season.
Stomatal control of transpiration increased between the wet and dry season.
This was revealed by the decline in the slope of E with increasing leaf-to
-air vapor pressure difference (D) between wet and dry seasons, and also by
the significant decrease in the ratio of boundary to canopy conductance ob
served between the wet and dry seasons.
A simple pan-tropical modeling of leaf area index or wet season canopy CO2
flux was undertaken. It was shown that with readily available data for foli
ar N content and the ratio of rainfall to potential evaporation, leaf index
and wet season canopy CO2 flux can be successfully estimated for a number
of tropical ecosystems, including north Australian savannas.