Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6327136 | Science of The Total Environment | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Sampling frequency effects on cumulative N2O flux estimation were assessed using a jackknife technique to inform future manual sampling campaigns. Test subsets of the daily measured data were generated for the pasture and two adjacent land-uses (rainforest and lychee orchard) by selecting measured flux values at regular time intervals ranging from 1 to 30Â days. Errors associated with weekly sampling were up to 34% of the sub-daily mean and were highly biased towards overestimation if strategically sampled following rain events. Sampling time of day also played a critical role. Morning sampling best represented the 24Â hour mean in the pasture, whereas sampling at noon proved the most accurate in the shaded rainforest and lychee orchard.
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Authors
D.W. Rowlings, P.R. Grace, C. Scheer, S. Liu,