Session 3 Effects of Canopy Structure on Turbulent Transport Part I

Monday, 12 May 2014: 1:30 PM-3:00 PM
Bellmont A (Crowne Plaza Portland Downtown Convention Center Hotel)
Host: 31st Conference on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
Chair:
April L. Hiscox, University of South Carolina, Department of Geography, Columbia, SC

Many natural and managed ecosystems – for example, forests, orchards, and vineyards – exhibit significant canopy structure. This structure not only impacts the development and intensity of turbulence within and above the canopy, it also strongly influences the transport of heat, moisture, carbon dioxide, and other scalar quantities. The aim herein is to explore both the unique characteristics of turbulence in complex canopies and the methods for measuring and modeling turbulent transport in these environments.

Papers:
1:30 PM
3.1
Experimental Evaluation of Flux Footprint Models
Katja Heidbach, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany; and M. Mauder and H. P. Schmid

1:45 PM
3.2
How representative are measurements from a single tower? Implications from a highly resolved wind tunnel study
Ian N. Harman, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Canberra, Australia; and M. Bohm, J. J. Finnigan, and D. Hughes
2:00 PM
3.3
2:15 PM
3.4
Use of the Richardson Number to Characterize Turbulence Structure over Plant Canopies
Tilden Meyers, NOAA/ARL, Oak Ridge, TN; and M. Heuer and J. Kochendorfer
Paper 3.6 has been moved to paper 1.1A scheduled for Mon. as part of 2BIOGEO.

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