Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components

Eddy covariance (EC) method has been used to measure CO2 fluxes over various ecosystems. Recently, the EC method has been also deployed in urban areas to measure CO2 fluxes. Urban carbon cycle is complex because of the additional anthropogenic processes unlike natural ecosystems but the EC method on...

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Main Authors: Keunmin Lee, Je-Woo Hong, Jeongwon Kim, Jinkyu Hong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:MethodsX
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016121000248
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spelling doaj-788c0dae335543ca896fd832e34f789d2021-01-26T04:12:44ZengElsevierMethodsX2215-01612021-01-018101231Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic componentsKeunmin Lee0Je-Woo Hong1Jeongwon Kim2Jinkyu Hong3Ecosystem-Atmosphere Process Laboratory, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul, South KoreaKorea Environment Institute, Sejong, South KoreaEcosystem-Atmosphere Process Laboratory, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul, South KoreaEcosystem-Atmosphere Process Laboratory, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea; Corresponding author.Eddy covariance (EC) method has been used to measure CO2 fluxes over various ecosystems. Recently, the EC method has been also deployed in urban areas to measure CO2 fluxes. Urban carbon cycle is complex because of the additional anthropogenic processes unlike natural ecosystems but the EC method only measures the net sum of all CO2 sources and sink. This limitation of the EC method hinders us from the underlying processes of the carbon cycle, and it is necessary to partition the net CO2 fluxes into individual contributions for a better understanding of the urban carbon cycle. Here we propose a statistical method to partition CO2 fluxes into individual components by extending the method of Menzer and McFadden (2017). • Statistical method is proposed to partition CO2 fluxes into gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, anthropogenic emissions from a vehicle and building. • This method uses eddy fluxes and footprint-weighted high-resolution land cover data with temporal subsets that a few components can be negligible. • New partitioning method produces reliable individual components of the urban carbon cycle when compared to inventory data and typical biotic responses to environmental conditions.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016121000248Building emissionCarbon cycleCO2 fluxEcosystem respirationEddy covariancePartitioning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keunmin Lee
Je-Woo Hong
Jeongwon Kim
Jinkyu Hong
spellingShingle Keunmin Lee
Je-Woo Hong
Jeongwon Kim
Jinkyu Hong
Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
MethodsX
Building emission
Carbon cycle
CO2 flux
Ecosystem respiration
Eddy covariance
Partitioning
author_facet Keunmin Lee
Je-Woo Hong
Jeongwon Kim
Jinkyu Hong
author_sort Keunmin Lee
title Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
title_short Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
title_full Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
title_fullStr Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
title_full_unstemmed Partitioning of net CO2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
title_sort partitioning of net co2 exchanges at the city-atmosphere interface into biotic and abiotic components
publisher Elsevier
series MethodsX
issn 2215-0161
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Eddy covariance (EC) method has been used to measure CO2 fluxes over various ecosystems. Recently, the EC method has been also deployed in urban areas to measure CO2 fluxes. Urban carbon cycle is complex because of the additional anthropogenic processes unlike natural ecosystems but the EC method only measures the net sum of all CO2 sources and sink. This limitation of the EC method hinders us from the underlying processes of the carbon cycle, and it is necessary to partition the net CO2 fluxes into individual contributions for a better understanding of the urban carbon cycle. Here we propose a statistical method to partition CO2 fluxes into individual components by extending the method of Menzer and McFadden (2017). • Statistical method is proposed to partition CO2 fluxes into gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, anthropogenic emissions from a vehicle and building. • This method uses eddy fluxes and footprint-weighted high-resolution land cover data with temporal subsets that a few components can be negligible. • New partitioning method produces reliable individual components of the urban carbon cycle when compared to inventory data and typical biotic responses to environmental conditions.
topic Building emission
Carbon cycle
CO2 flux
Ecosystem respiration
Eddy covariance
Partitioning
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016121000248
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AT jewoohong partitioningofnetco2exchangesatthecityatmosphereinterfaceintobioticandabioticcomponents
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