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Dennis Baldocchi Biometeorology Lab, ESPM University of California, Berkeley

Carbon & Water Exchange of California Rangelands: A n Oak-Grass Savanna, Annual Grassland and Peatland Pasture Ecosystem. Dennis Baldocchi Biometeorology Lab, ESPM University of California, Berkeley. Scientific and Management Questions.

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Dennis Baldocchi Biometeorology Lab, ESPM University of California, Berkeley

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  1. Carbon & Water Exchange of California Rangelands:An Oak-Grass Savanna, Annual Grassland and Peatland Pasture Ecosystem Dennis Baldocchi Biometeorology Lab, ESPM University of California, Berkeley

  2. Scientific and Management Questions • What are the magnitudes and temporal variability of the exchanges of energy, CO2 and water vapor in terrestrial ecosystems? • Is my rangeland a Carbon Sink? • If, not, How can I manage it to become one? • How does climate, vegetation type, physiological conditions phenology, changes in land use, management and disturbance history modulate the exchange of energy, carbon and water; and vice versa? • Can my rangeland off-set global warming? • Can it conserve water for the watershed and reservoir?

  3. Take Home Messages • Oak Woodlands are modest Carbon Sinks, Grasslands are Carbon Neutral, & Peatlandpastures are Carbon Sources • Year-to-year variability in Carbon Uptake is due to length of the wet season. • Oaks are risk adverse and experience less inter-annual variability in NEE than grasslands • Savanna woodlands use/need more water than annual grasslands • Trees tap ground-water to sustain themselves during the summer • Oak woodlands are darker and warmer than annual grasslands

  4. Oak-Savanna TonziRanch Flux Tower

  5. Annual Grassland VairaRanch

  6. Oak-Grass Savanna: A Two Layer System Winter: Trees deciduous; grass green Summer: Trees green; grass dead Spring: Trees green;grass green

  7. Oak-Grass Savanna are Model Systems for Studying Ecosystem Ecology • Structure/Function • Oak and grasses provide contrasting life forms, woody/herbaceous, perennial/annual • The Canopy is open and heterogeneous • gives us a opportunity to test the applicability of ecosystem and biogeophysical models, developed for ideal and closed canopies • Environmental Biology • The Mediterranean climate provides distinct wet/ cool and dry/hot seasons to examine the ecosystem response (photosynthesis, transpiration, respiration, stomatal conductance) to a spectrum of soil moisture and temperature conditions • Global Change • The Mediterranean climate experiences great extremes in inter-annual variability in rainfall; we experience a wider range in precipitation over a few years than long-term predicted changes.

  8. Sherman Island Peatland Pasture

  9. Peatland Pastures are a Model for studying Land Subsidence and Carbon Management in the Delta

  10. Background Conditions http://www.carolsatriani.com/img0005.html

  11. Annual Precipitation ~500 - 700 mm/yMean Annual Temperature ~ 14-16 C

  12. Cool Wet, Winters...Hot, Dry Summers Camp Pardee, CA

  13. Climate Trends: Pardee, CA Temperature Increased by about 1.25 C over 50 Years; Precipitation Trend is Flat, but with High Inter-annual Variation

  14. Environmental Conditions Ma et al, in prep

  15. Experimental Methods • Eddy Covariance • above the stand (20 m tower) • below the stand (2 m tower) • Micrometeorology • Sap flow (heat pulse) • Soil respiration chambers • Leaf Physiology (A-Ci curves)

  16. Eddy Covariance

  17. Results and Discussion http://www.terrysteinke.com/pixpages/etchingpages/valleyoak.html

  18. ‘Breathing of the Ecosystem’

  19. Pasture is a Carbon Source mowing NEE = +27 gC m-2 y-1, 2008 NEE = +82 gC m-2 y-1, April, 2007-April ,2008

  20. Oak Woodlands are Carbon Sinks, -92 +/- 43 gC m-2 y-1 Annual Grasslands are Carbon Neutral, 30 +/- 116 gC m-2 y-1 Oak Woodlands are Risk Adverse, they Experience less inter-annual variation in NEE than Grasslands

  21. Perspective 16.86 sheets of 8 ½ by 11 inch paper is 1 m2 in area and equals 76 g

  22. Carbon Fluxes Scales with Spring Rainfall Ma et al, 2007 AgForMet

  23. Net Primary Productivity John Battle's biometric NPP = 235 gC m-2 y-1. NPP = GPPtree - Ra_tree - Rh = 299 gC m-2 y-1 NPP=NEP+Rh=97+186=283 gC m-2 y-1.

  24. Dry Matter Production, Grasslands

  25. Interannual Variability in GPP and Reco scale with one another

  26. Sustained and Elevated Rates of Respiration after Fall Rain

  27. Impacts of Photosynthesis and rain pulse on ecosystem respiration of the Oak Woodland Baldocchi et al, JGR, Biogeosciences, 2006

  28. Remote Sensing of Canopy Structure and NPP

  29. IKONOS: 1 m resolution in b/w; 4 m res. in color

  30. LIDAR Measurement of Tree Height

  31. Canopy Photosynthesis Follows changes in Canopy Structure

  32. Upscale GPP and NEE to the Biome Scale area-averaged fluxes of NEE and GPP were -150 and 932 gC m-2 y-1 net and gross carbon fluxes equal -8.6 and 53.8 TgC y-1 Jingfeng Xiao and D Baldocchi

  33. Water, Energy and Evaporation http://www.carolsatriani.com/2019.html

  34. Evaporation from Irrigated Pasture

  35. Inter-annual Variation in Rain and Evaporation On Average, Woodland Uses 410 mm of Water on 540 mm of Rain

  36. Oak Trees Tap Ground Water, and Must to Survive G. Miller, Y. Rubin, D. Baldocchi unpublished data

  37. Oak Trees Access a Significant Fraction of Water from Water Table G. Miller, Y. Rubin, S. Ma, D. Baldocchi unpublished data

  38. Role of Land Management on Water and Energy Exchange and Climate Case Study: Savanna Woodland vs Grassland

  39. Oak Woodlands are Warmer than Grasslands Mean Potential Temperature difference Equals 0.84 C; grass: 290.72 K vs savanna: 291.56 K

  40. Available Energy Drives Heat Exchange and Evaporation • Savanna absorbs much more Radiation (3.18 GJ m-2 y-1) than • the Grassland (2.28 GJ m-2 y-1) ; DRn: 28.4 W m-2

  41. Savanna injects more Sensible Heat into the atmosphere because it has more Available Energy and it is Aerodynamically Rougher Tall and Rougher Savanna Promotes Turbulent mixing over Short, SmootherGrassland

  42. Landscape Differences on Short Time Scales: Grass ET > Forest ET

  43. Role of Land Use on ET on Annual Time Scales: Annual Oak ET (400 +/-35 mm/y) > Grass ET (322 +/-48 mm/y)

  44. Synthesis/Conclusions

  45. Conclusions • Oak Woodlands are Carbon Sinks, Grasslands are Carbon Neutral • Year to year variability in Carbon Uptake is due to length of wet season. • Oaks are risk adverse and experience less inter-annual variability in NEE than grasslands • Photosynthesis and Respiration are tightly linked • Oaks need high N levels to attain sufficient rates of carbon assimilation for the short growing season • Savanna woodlands need about 80 mm more water to function than nearby grasslands • Trees tap ground-water to sustain themselves during the summer • Oaks are darker and warmer than grasslands

  46. Biometeorology Team Funding: US DOE/TCP; NASA; WESTGEC; Kearney; Ca Ag Expt Station

  47. Questions • How would you use these data to make land mgt Decisions? • Are you compelled to cut-trees for grass, to save water and cool the climate? • What about Topography and the role of trees to maintain soils and serve as habitat • Encourage trees on grasslands to sequester carbon? • Do you have enough rain? • Should Delta Peatland Pastures revert back to tules and wetlands? • What about methane emissions (20x CO2), mosquitoes and water quality?

  48. Annual ET and Interannual Variation Savanna Soil Stores about 80 mm water and uses that much extra to sustain a sparse woodland, over a grassland

  49. Canopy Structure:Laser Altimeter Data

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