AmeriFlux AmeriFlux CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site
Abstract
This is the AmeriFlux version of the carbon flux data for the site CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site. Site Description - The UCI-1981 site is located in a continental boreal forest, dominated by black spruce trees, within the BOREAS northern study area in central Manitoba, Canada. The site is a member of a chronological series of sites that are representative secondary succession growth stages after large stand replacement fires. Black spruce trees undergo a slow growth process enabling the accurate determination of the chronosequence of stand age disturbance. Additionally, boreal forests make up approximately 25% of forest ecosystems on earth. With both of these in mind, the UCI sites provide an excellent location to study the CO2 exchange between the atmosphere and boreal forest ecosystems as a function of sequential wildfires.
- Authors:
-
- University of California - Irvine
- Publication Date:
- Research Org.:
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States). AmeriFlux; University of California - Irvine
- Sponsoring Org.:
- DOE/TCP
- Geolocation:
- 55.8631, -98.485
- OSTI Identifier:
- 1246002
- DOI:
- https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1246002
- Project Location:
-
Citation Formats
Goulden, Mike. AmeriFlux AmeriFlux CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site. Canada: N. p., 2016.
Web. doi:10.17190/AMF/1246002.
Goulden, Mike. AmeriFlux AmeriFlux CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site. Canada. doi:https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1246002
Goulden, Mike. 2016.
"AmeriFlux AmeriFlux CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site". Canada. doi:https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1246002. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1246002. Pub date:Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 EST 2016
@article{osti_1246002,
title = {AmeriFlux AmeriFlux CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site},
author = {Goulden, Mike},
abstractNote = {This is the AmeriFlux version of the carbon flux data for the site CA-NS5 UCI-1981 burn site. Site Description - The UCI-1981 site is located in a continental boreal forest, dominated by black spruce trees, within the BOREAS northern study area in central Manitoba, Canada. The site is a member of a chronological series of sites that are representative secondary succession growth stages after large stand replacement fires. Black spruce trees undergo a slow growth process enabling the accurate determination of the chronosequence of stand age disturbance. Additionally, boreal forests make up approximately 25% of forest ecosystems on earth. With both of these in mind, the UCI sites provide an excellent location to study the CO2 exchange between the atmosphere and boreal forest ecosystems as a function of sequential wildfires.},
doi = {10.17190/AMF/1246002},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {Canada},
year = {2016},
month = {1}
}
Works referenced in this record: