Abstract

Abstract. Latent and sensible heat surface fluxes are key factors of the western African monsoon dynamics. However, few long-term observations of these land surface fluxes are available; these are needed to increase understanding of the underlying processes and assess their impacts on the energy and water cycles at the surface–atmosphere interface. This study analyzes turbulent fluxes of one full year, measured with the eddy covariance technique, over a cultivated area in northern Benin (western Africa). The study site is part of the long-term AMMA–CATCH (African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis–Coupling of the Tropical Atmosphere and Hydrological Cycle) hydrological observatory. The flux partitioning was investigated through the evaporative fraction (EF) and the Bowen ratio (β) at both seasonal and daily scales. Finally, the surface conductance (Gs) and the decoupling coefficient (Ω) were calculated and compared with specific bare soil or canopy models. Four contrasting seasons were identified and characterized by their typical daily energy cycles. The results pointed out the contrasting seasonal variations of sensible and latent heat fluxes due to changing atmospheric and surface conditions. In the dry season, the sensible heat fluxes were largely dominant (β ~ 10) and a low but significant evapotranspiration was measured (EF = 0.08); this was attributed to a few neighboring bushes, possibly fed by the water table. During the wet season, after the monsoon onset, surface conditions barely affected the evaporative fraction (EF), which remained steady (EF = 0.75); the latent heat flux was dominant and the Bowen ration (β) was about 0.4. During the dry-to-wet and wet-to-dry transition seasons, both EF and β were highly variable, as they depended on the atmospheric forcing or the response to isolated rains. A complete surface–atmosphere decoupling was never observed in 2008 (0 < Ω < 0.6), which suggests a systematic mixing of the air within the canopy with the atmospheric surface layer, irrespective of the atmospheric conditions and the vegetation height. Modeling approaches showed a good agreement of soil resistance with the Sakaguchi bare soil model. Canopy conductance was also well reproduced with the Ball–Berry stomata model. We showed that the skin surface temperature had a large seasonal and daily amplitude, and played a major role in all the surface processes. Consequently, an accurate modeling of the surface temperature is crucial to represent correctly the energy and water budgets for this region.

Highlights

  • Since the pioneering work of Charney (1975), numerous studies have confirmed the effects of the continental surface on climate; in particular, they have focused on the major importance of surface–atmosphere exchanges over western Africa (Eltahir, 1998; Koster et al, 2004; Parker et al, 2005; among others)

  • This study focuses on the analysis of a full year of eddy covariance surface flux measurements, collected for a cultivated area on the southern AMMA–CATCH site, located in the Sudanian climate region in northern Benin (Fig. 1)

  • The objectives of this paper are threefold: (1) to document the seasonal and daily variations of latent (LE) and sensible (H ) heat fluxes over a crop field in this Sudanian region; (2) to analyze and quantify the energy partitioning as a function of surface characteristics at the seasonal and daily timescales; (3) to evaluate the ability of standard parameterizations to reproduce the daily and seasonal dynamics of the evapotranspiration in this specific tropical site, as these parameterizations are implemented in land surface models

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Summary

Introduction

Since the pioneering work of Charney (1975), numerous studies have confirmed the effects of the continental surface on climate; in particular, they have focused on the major importance of surface–atmosphere exchanges over western Africa (Eltahir, 1998; Koster et al, 2004; Parker et al, 2005; among others). These interactions impact the frequency of the rainy events in the Sahel (Taylor and Lebel, 1998) and Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. The influence of the vegetation activity on the monsoon dynamics has been evidenced by modeling studies (Xue and Shukla, 1993; Zeng et al, 1999; among others), but very few observations support these results

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