Monitoring Carbon, Heat, and Water Vapor turbulent fluxes over an Agricultural Field in Santarém.
Ricardo
K.
Sakai, Jungle Research Group, UAlbany, SUNY, sakai@asrc.cestm.albany.edu
(Presenting)
David
Roy
Fitzjarrald, Jungle Research Group, UAlbany, SUNY, fitz@asrc.cestm.albany.edu
Osvaldo
Luiz Leal de
Moraes, Dept. Fisica, UFSM, Santa Maria RS, moraes@mail1.ufsm.br
Matthew
J.
Czikowsky, Jungle Research Group, UAlbany, SUNY, matt@asrc.cestm.albany.edu
Otávio
C.
Acevedo, Dept. Fisica, UFSM, Santa Maria RS, otavio@smail.ufsm.br
Rodrigo
da
Silva, Dept. Fisica, UFSM, Santa Maria RS, rodrigo@asrc.cestm.albany.edu
Eleazar
Brait, LBA-ECO Escritório e Laboratório de Apoio em Santarém, brait@lbaeco.com.br
Valdelírio
Miranda, LBA-ECO Escritório e Laboratório de Apoio em Santarém, miranda@lbaeco.com.br
Interest in the impact of deforestation on climate in Amazon has been shown in several models and projects. Previous studies concentrated on the transformation from forest to pasture. However, in recent years, there has been an increase in the area of rice and soy bean plantation in the Amazon. In the Large scale Biosphere-Atmosphere experiment in Amazonia (LBA) there is a continuing effort to understand the effects of this consequence of deforestation by generating a nearly continuous flux data set. This study presents the results of turbulent flux measurements of carbon, heat, and moisture using the eddy correlation system over an agricultural site in the Eastern Amazon region. During the last 5 years this field has been transformed from a pasture to a rice and soy bean plantation. We will show the changes in turbulent fluxes (CO2, H20, and heat), radiative parameters (albedo and PAR-albedo) due to changing landscape from a pasture to crop fields. We also will show the impact of burning and plowing techniques on these parameters.
Submetido por David Roy Fitzjarrald em 23-MAR-2004
Tema Científico do LBA: CD (Armazenamento e Trocas de Carbono)