Abstract

Abstract. Large changes in the Arctic carbon balance are expected as warming linked to climate change threatens to destabilize ancient permafrost carbon stocks. The eddy covariance (EC) method is an established technique to quantify net losses and gains of carbon between the biosphere and atmosphere at high spatiotemporal resolution. Over the past decades, a growing network of terrestrial EC tower sites has been established across the Arctic, but a comprehensive assessment of the network's representativeness within the heterogeneous Arctic region is still lacking. This creates additional uncertainties when integrating flux data across sites, for example when upscaling fluxes to constrain pan-Arctic carbon budgets and changes therein. This study provides an inventory of Arctic (here > = 60∘ N) EC sites, which has also been made available online (https://cosima.nceas.ucsb.edu/carbon-flux-sites/, last access: 25 January 2022). Our database currently comprises 120 EC sites, but only 83 are listed as active, and just 25 of these active sites remain operational throughout the winter. To map the representativeness of this EC network, we evaluated the similarity between environmental conditions observed at the tower locations and those within the larger Arctic study domain based on 18 bioclimatic and edaphic variables. This allows us to assess a general level of similarity between ecosystem conditions within the domain, while not necessarily reflecting changes in greenhouse gas flux rates directly. We define two metrics based on this representativeness score: one that measures whether a location is represented by an EC tower with similar characteristics (ER1) and a second for which we assess if a minimum level of representation for statistically rigorous extrapolation is met (ER4). We find that while half of the domain is represented by at least one tower, only a third has enough towers in similar locations to allow reliable extrapolation. When we consider methane measurements or year-round (including wintertime) measurements, the values drop to about 1/5 and 1/10 of the domain, respectively. With the majority of sites located in Fennoscandia and Alaska, these regions were assigned the highest level of network representativeness, while large parts of Siberia and patches of Canada were classified as underrepresented. Across the Arctic, mountainous regions were particularly poorly represented by the current EC observation network. We tested three different strategies to identify new site locations or upgrades of existing sites that optimally enhance the representativeness of the current EC network. While 15 new sites can improve the representativeness of the pan-Arctic network by 20 %, upgrading as few as 10 existing sites to capture methane fluxes or remain active during wintertime can improve their respective ER1 network coverage by 28 % to 33 %. This targeted network improvement could be shown to be clearly superior to an unguided selection of new sites, therefore leading to substantial improvements in network coverage based on relatively small investments.

Highlights

  • Because of the vastness, inaccessibility, and extreme climate of the Arctic zone, research in this region is a complex endeavor

  • This study helps to guide efficient upgrades of the Arctic greenhouse gas monitoring facilities, showing that even though the Arctic Eddy covariance (EC) network has grown considerably over the past decades, only half of the Arctic territory is represented by an EC tower at all, and this value drops to onethird of the domain when we consider a statistically rigorous number of EC towers for upscaling

  • There are large gaps when it comes to year-round data coverage and non-CO2 fluxes, with less than 20 % of the Arctic terrestrial domain currently being covered by these measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Inaccessibility, and extreme climate of the Arctic zone, research in this region is a complex endeavor. Despite the difficulties listed above, many EC sites that measure greenhouse gas fluxes have been established in the Arctic (Kutzbach et al, 2007; Dolman et al, 2012; Ueyama et al, 2013; Zona et al, 2014; Emmerton et al, 2016; Zona et al, 2016; Parmentier et al, 2017), which for this study we consider to be the region north of 60◦ latitude. Most of these sites are affiliated with global and regional EC flux networks (e.g., Fluxnet, AmeriFlux, AsiaFlux, Integrated Carbon Observation System), facilitating multi-site syntheses. Beyond the fact that metadata information for specific sites sometimes differs between these networks, some sites are not listed in any of them, which makes it difficult for scientists working in this domain to gain a clear overview of all available EC data

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