Session 5 Effects of Canopy Structure on Turbulent Transport Part II

Tuesday, 13 May 2014: 8:30 AM-10:00 AM
Bellmont A (Crowne Plaza Portland Downtown Convention Center Hotel)
Host: 31st Conference on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
Chair:
Tilden Meyers, NOAA/ARL, Air Resources Laboratory/ATDD, Oak Ridge, TN

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:
8:30 AM
5.1
Evolution of turbulence in the vertical under near-calm conditions within a forest canopy over complex terrain
Eric S. Russell, Washington State University, Pullman, WA; and H. Liu, Q. Zhang, N. Wagenbrenner, A. Prieto, and B. K. Lamb
8:45 AM
5.2
Large-eddy simulations with a dynamic vegetation model of tree-scale soil-vegetation flux interactions
Gil Bohrer, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; and K. Maurer, D. Medvigy, W. T. Kenny, and V. Y. Ivanov
9:15 AM
5.4
Impacts of Recirculation on Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions over Complex Terrain
Eric Kutter, CUNY, Flushing, NY; and C. Yi, G. R. Hendrey, H. Liu, T. T. Eaton, and W. Ni-Meister
9:30 AM
5.5
Impacts of the Reconfiguration Mechanism on the Structure of Turbulence Inside Plant Canopies
Ying Pan, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; and E. M. Follett, M. Chamecki, H. Nepf, and S. A. Isard
9:45 AM
5.6
Flux-Gradient Relationships in an Open-Canopy Lodgepole Pine Stand after Insect Attack
Carmen Emmel, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland; and Z. Nesic, R. Ketler, T. A. Black, and A. Christen
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