Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4380477 Acta Ecologica Sinica 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Water-vapor flux over a planted coniferous forest ecosystem near Qianyanzhou, Jiangxi Province, China, was continuously measured with the eddy covariance technique for 2004. How environmental variables, including net radiation, air temperature, and soil moisture, affected water-vapor flux variation was studied in detail. Results showed that winter had the lowest monthly water-vapor flux value, whereas summer had the highest. The diurnal variation of water-vapor flux showed different patterns for clear and cloudy days. The annual total evapotranspiration was 736.1 mm. Regression analysis showed that daily water-vapor flux was significantly correlated with net radiation, air temperature, soil temperature, and soil heat flux on both clear and cloudy days, all in quadratic relationships. Stepwise regression analysis demonstrated that a different set of environmental factors controlled water-vapor flux on days with different weather conditions. From this study, it was clear that these environmental variables, especially net radiation and soil temperature, regulated water-vapor flux over the planted coniferous ecosystem.

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