Abstract

Energy balance closure is an important feature in studies of ecosystem exchanges of energy and greenhouse gases using the eddy covariance method. Previous analyses show that this is still a problem with imbalances in the order of 0.6–0.7 to full closure (for only a few sites). It has been suggested that mesoscale transport processes that are not captured by the eddy covariance measurements are the main reason behind the closure problem. So far, very little action has been taken to investigate another potential cause of the problem, namely, the role of spatial variation in net radiation at the scale of typical flux footprints. The reason for this knowledge gap is mainly due to the lack of suitable methods to perform such investigations. Here, we show that such measurements can be performed with an unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with radiation sensors. A comparison using a reference radiometer on a fixed mast with a hovering UAV equipped with pyranometers for incoming and outgoing shortwave radiation and an infrared thermometer for surface temperature measurements shows that incoming and outgoing shortwave radiation can be measured with a standard error of 7.4 Wm−2 and 1.8 Wm−2, respectively. An application of the system was made over a five-year-old forest flux site in Sweden. Here, the net longwave radiation was estimated from the measured surface temperature and the calculated incoming longwave radiation. The results show that during the mission around noon on a clear day, distinct ‘hotspots’ existed over the plantation with the albedo varying between 15.5 and 17.9%, the surface temperature varying between 22.2 and 25.5 °C and the net radiation varying between 330 and 380 Wm−2. These variations are large enough to have a significant impact on the energy balance closure problem. Our conclusion is that we now have the tools to investigate the spatial variability of the radiation regime over flux sites and that this should be given more attention in the future.

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