Abstract
The temporal interactions between water and carbon cycling and the controlling environmental variables are investigated using wavelets and information theory. We used 3.5 years of eddy covariance station observations from an abandoned agricultural field in the central U.S. Time-series of the entropy of water and carbon fluxes exhibit pronounced annual cycles, primarily explained by the modulation of the diurnal flux amplitude by other variables, such as the net radiation. Entropies of soil moisture and precipitation show almost no annual cycle, but the data were collected during above average precipitation years, which limits the role of moisture stress on the resultant fluxes. We also investigated the information contribution to resultant fluxes from selected environmental variables as a function of time-scale using relative entropy. The relative entropy of latent heat flux and ecosystem respiration show that the radiation terms contribute the most information to these fluxes at scales up to the diurnal scale. Vapor pressure deficit and air temperature contribute to the most information for the gross primary productivity and net ecosystem exchange at the daily time-scale. The relative entropy between the fluxes and soil moisture illustrates that soil moisture contributes information at approximately weekly time-scales, while the relative entropy with precipitation contributes information predominantly at the monthly time-scale. The use of information theory metrics is a relatively new technique for assessing biosphere-atmosphere interactions, and this study illustrates the utility of the approach for assessing the dominant time-scales of these interactions.
Highlights
The transfer of water between the terrestrial surface and the atmosphere can account for large portions of the available energy
This decreases the overall entropy to minimum values of approximately (0.6), it is highly variable
We investigated the similarity of the distributions of water and carbon fluxes and some environmental variables using wavelets and information theory
Summary
The transfer of water between the terrestrial surface and the atmosphere can account for large portions of the available energy. Wavelet transforms have been used to characterize the dominant temporal scales of land surface fluxes [2], the relative control of various meteorological variables on the ecosystem responses [3,4], the interaction between local fluxes and regional circulations, like monsoonal patterns [5], and to provide a quantitative comparison of these interactions across ecosystems [6]. Such diagnostics of the cross scale variability of fluxes between the surface and the atmosphere can help evaluate current models [7,8]
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