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Analysis of the terrestrial carbon cycle through data assimilation and remote sensing Mathew Williams, University of Edinburgh Collaborators L Spadavecchia, M Van Wijk. B Law, J Irvine, P Schwarz, M Kurpius, T Quaife, P Lewis M Disney G Shaver, L Street
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Source: CD Keeling, NOAA/ESRL Sampling at 3397 meters, well mixed free troposphere
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Harvard Forest Data since 1989
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Source: Wofsy et al, Harvard Forest LTER Hourly data ~5 m above canopy
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Talk outline What are the uncertainties in temporal and spatial extrapolation of C cycle estimates? 1.Using multiple time series data to constrain C cycle analyses 2.Use multiscale spatial studies to determine up- scaling uncertainties
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PART 1: Time
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Improving estimates of C dynamics MODELS OBSERVATIONS FUSION ANALYSIS MODELS + Capable of interpolation & forecasts - Subjective & inaccurate? OBSERVATIONS +Clear confidence limits - Incomplete, patchy - Net fluxes ANALYSIS + Complete + Clear confidence limits + Capable of forecasts
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Time update “predict” Measurement update “correct” A prediction-correction system Initial conditions
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The Kalman Filter MODEL AtAt F t+1 F´ t+1 OPERATOR A t+1 D t+1 Assimilation Initial stateForecast Observations Predictions Analysis P Ensemble Kalman Filter Drivers
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C cycling in Ponderosa Pine, OR Flux tower (2000-2) Sap flow Soil/stem/leaf respiration LAI, stem, root biomass Litter fall measurements
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Time (days since 1 Jan 2000) Williams et al GCB (2005) Chambers Sap-flow A/Ci EC Chambers
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Time (days since 1 Jan 2000)
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GPPC root C wood C foliage C litter C SOM/CWD RaRa AfAf ArAr AwAw LfLf LrLr LwLw RhRh D Temperature controlled 5 model pools 10 model fluxes 11 parameters 10 data time series R total & Net Ecosystem Exchange of CO 2 C = carbon pools A = allocation L = litter fall R = respiration (auto- & heterotrophic)
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Time (days since 1 Jan 2000) = observation — = mean analysis | = SD of the analysis (Williams et al 2005)
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Time (days since 1 Jan 2000) = observation — = mean analysis | = SD of the analysis (Williams et al 2005)
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Data brings confidence = observation — = mean analysis | = SD of the analysis (Williams et al 2005)
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Assimilating EO reflectance data DALEC AtAt F t+1 Reflectance t +1 Radiative transfer A t+1 MODIS t+1 DA
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GPP results No assimilation Assimilating MODIS (bands 1 and 2) Quaife et al, RSE (in press)
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Summary: time Multiple time series data generate powerful constraints on analyses For improved predictions, better constraints on long time constant processes are required Error characterisation is vital EO data can be assimilated with appropriate observation operators
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PART 2: Space
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(Street et al 2007, Shaver et al 2007)
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(Van Wijk & Williams 2005)
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0.2 m 0.5 m 1.0 m 1.5 m 2.0 m 3.0 m 0.1 m0.75 m1.5 m2.35 m3.0 m4.5 m Height of sensor and field of view
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Distance (m) (Williams et al. in press) macroscalemicroscale A multi-scale experimental design
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Linear averaged Skye NDVIs (collected at 0.2 x 02 m resolution with diffuser off) versus measured NDVIs at coarser spatial scales with diffuser on Microscale study: Scale invariance
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Relationships between estimated LAI (using both Skye NDVI and LI-COR LAI-2000 observations at 0.2 m resolution, linearly averaged for upscaling) versus Skye NDVI at different spatial scales. Microscale study: Scale invariance
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Frequency histograms for LAI estimates in the microscale site at a range of resolutions. (Williams et al. in press)
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Semi-variogram for LAI in the microscale study
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Measured in a ground survey, 2004 Satellite overpass, ETM+, August 2001 Inferred from ground NDVI Macroscale study: Frequency histograms
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A significant but poor correlation with LandSat data
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Macroscale study: Semivariograms Measured in a ground survey, 2004 Satellite overpass, ETM+, August 2001 Inferred from ground NDVI
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TechniqueGround LAI Landsat NDVI RMSEMAE Inverse distance weighting (IDW) yesno0.270.21 Linear correlation model (LCM) yes 0.280.21 Ordinary Kriging (OK)yesno0.280.21 External drift Kriging (EDK) yes 0.290.22 Extrapolation models
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Kriging Error (Williams et al. in press) IDW Landsat Kriging
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Summary: space Scale invariance in LAI-NDVI relationships at scales > vegetation patches However spatial variability is high so Kriging has limited usefulness Over scales >50 m interpolation error was of similar magnitude to the uncertainty in the Landsat NDVI calibration to LAI Characterisation of spatial LAI errors provides key data for spatial data assimilation
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Key challenges and opportunities Coping with variable data richness Identifying and removing model bias Estimating representation and data errors Making use of remote sensing (optical and X CO2 ) Links to atmospheric CO 2 using CTMs. Designing experimental network Boundaries in natural systems
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Thank you Funding support: NERC NASA DOE
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REFLEX: GOALS To identify and compare the strengths and weaknesses of various MDF techniques To quantify errors and biases introduced when extrapolating fluxes made at flux tower sites using EO data Closing date for contributions: 31 October www.carbonfusion.org
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Regional Flux Estimation Experiment, stage 1 Flux data MODIS LAI MDF Full analysis Model parameters Forecasts DALEC model Training Runs - FluxNet data - synthetic data Deciduous forest sites Coniferous forest sites Assimilation Output www.carbonfusion.org
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observations (with noise) truth predictions uncertainty Synthetic evergreen forest 2 years obs., 1 year prediction Figure by Andrew Fox
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REFLEX, stage 2 Flux data MODIS LAI MDF Model parameters DALEC model Testing predictions With only limited EO data MDF MODIS LAI Analysis Flux data testing Assimilation
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FluxNet – Integrating worldwide CO2 flux measurements How to upscale from site locations to regions and the globe?
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