TY - JOUR
T1 - The breathing of the Andean highlands
T2 - Net ecosystem exchange and evapotranspiration over the páramo of southern Ecuador
AU - Carrillo-Rojas, Galo
AU - Silva, Brenner
AU - Rollenbeck, Rütger
AU - Célleri, Rolando
AU - Bendix, Jörg
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2019/2/15
Y1 - 2019/2/15
N2 - Atmospheric carbon (CO2) exchange, evapotranspiration (ET) processes, and their interactions with climatic drivers across tropical alpine grasslands are poorly understood. This lack of understanding is particularly evident for the páramo, the highest vegetated frontier in the northern Andes, the main source of water for inter-Andean cities, and a large carbon storage area. Studies of CO2 and ET fluxes via the standard Eddy Covariance (EC) technique have never been applied to this region, limiting the understanding of diurnal / nocturnal exchanges and budget estimations. In this paper, we report the first EC analysis conducted on the Andean páramo (3765 m a.s.l.); this analysis measured CO2, ET, and micrometeorological variables over two years (2016–2018) to understand their interactions with climatic / biophysical controls. The páramo was found to be a source of CO2 and exhibited a net positive exchange (mean = +99 ± 30 gC m−2 per year). The light-responses of net CO2 exchange and the primary productivity were correlated and model-parameterized. Evapotranspiration was 635 ± 9 mm per year (51% of the annual rainfall total), and we obtained crop coefficients for the dominant vegetation (Tussock grass) based on reference-ET models FAO56 and ASCE-ERWI (0.90 and 0.78, respectively). We also compared our results to those from other high-altitude (alpine) and high-latitude grasslands (tundra). Finally, we demonstrate that our measurement period is representative of the páramo's longer-term climate dynamics. Our investigation contributes to the body of knowledge on the land surface-atmosphere processes of the tropical Andes and supports decision-making about ecosystem services management and the preservation of this vulnerable biome.
AB - Atmospheric carbon (CO2) exchange, evapotranspiration (ET) processes, and their interactions with climatic drivers across tropical alpine grasslands are poorly understood. This lack of understanding is particularly evident for the páramo, the highest vegetated frontier in the northern Andes, the main source of water for inter-Andean cities, and a large carbon storage area. Studies of CO2 and ET fluxes via the standard Eddy Covariance (EC) technique have never been applied to this region, limiting the understanding of diurnal / nocturnal exchanges and budget estimations. In this paper, we report the first EC analysis conducted on the Andean páramo (3765 m a.s.l.); this analysis measured CO2, ET, and micrometeorological variables over two years (2016–2018) to understand their interactions with climatic / biophysical controls. The páramo was found to be a source of CO2 and exhibited a net positive exchange (mean = +99 ± 30 gC m−2 per year). The light-responses of net CO2 exchange and the primary productivity were correlated and model-parameterized. Evapotranspiration was 635 ± 9 mm per year (51% of the annual rainfall total), and we obtained crop coefficients for the dominant vegetation (Tussock grass) based on reference-ET models FAO56 and ASCE-ERWI (0.90 and 0.78, respectively). We also compared our results to those from other high-altitude (alpine) and high-latitude grasslands (tundra). Finally, we demonstrate that our measurement period is representative of the páramo's longer-term climate dynamics. Our investigation contributes to the body of knowledge on the land surface-atmosphere processes of the tropical Andes and supports decision-making about ecosystem services management and the preservation of this vulnerable biome.
KW - Carbon
KW - Ecuador
KW - Eddy covariance
KW - Evapotranspiration
KW - Páramo
KW - Tropical Andes
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85056574791
U2 - 10.1016/j.agrformet.2018.11.006
DO - 10.1016/j.agrformet.2018.11.006
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85056574791
SN - 0168-1923
VL - 265
SP - 30
EP - 47
JO - Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
JF - Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
ER -