The interaction between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere continues to be a central research theme within climate, hydrology, and ecology communities. This interest is stimulated by research issues pertinent to both the fundamental laws and the hierarchy of scales. To further explorer such topics over various spatial and temporal domains, in this study, biosphere-atmosphere interactions are studied at two different scales, leaf-to-canopy and canopy-to-atmospheric boundary-layer (ABL) scales, by utilizing both models and long-term measurements collected from the Duke Forest AmeriFlux sites. For the leaf-to-canopy scale, two classical problems motivated by contemporary applications are considered: (1) ‘inverse problem’ – determination...
Understanding the sensitivity of transpiration to stomatal conductance is critical to simulating the...
Canopy structure is one of the most important vegetation characteristics for land–atmosphere interac...
This thesis deals with the research question: which processes are relevant in controlling the exchan...
The interaction between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere continues to be a central research...
This thesis explores and quantifies how the surface and vegetation, through photosynthesis, and clou...
<p>Turbulence within and immediately above a vegetation canopy is the driver of exchange processes w...
The atmosphere and biosphere interact strongly in the planetary boundary layer. Understanding the me...
In the present study, the ability of different indices to quantify the coupling degree between a ve...
Vegetation and atmosphere processes are coupled through a myriad of interactions linking plant trans...
The planetary boundary layer (PBL) provides an important link between the scales and processes resol...
In this paper the surface energy balance of forests is considered on a regional scale. The interacti...
A coupled planetary boundary layer (PBL)-vegetation model is used to study the influence of the PBL-...
<p>Terrestrial ecosystems, occupying more than 25% of the Earth's surface, can serve as</p><p>`biolo...
The CloudRoots field experiment was designed to obtain a comprehensive observational dataset that in...
Interactions among the atmosphere, terrestrial ecosystems, and the hydrological cycle have been the ...
Understanding the sensitivity of transpiration to stomatal conductance is critical to simulating the...
Canopy structure is one of the most important vegetation characteristics for land–atmosphere interac...
This thesis deals with the research question: which processes are relevant in controlling the exchan...
The interaction between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere continues to be a central research...
This thesis explores and quantifies how the surface and vegetation, through photosynthesis, and clou...
<p>Turbulence within and immediately above a vegetation canopy is the driver of exchange processes w...
The atmosphere and biosphere interact strongly in the planetary boundary layer. Understanding the me...
In the present study, the ability of different indices to quantify the coupling degree between a ve...
Vegetation and atmosphere processes are coupled through a myriad of interactions linking plant trans...
The planetary boundary layer (PBL) provides an important link between the scales and processes resol...
In this paper the surface energy balance of forests is considered on a regional scale. The interacti...
A coupled planetary boundary layer (PBL)-vegetation model is used to study the influence of the PBL-...
<p>Terrestrial ecosystems, occupying more than 25% of the Earth's surface, can serve as</p><p>`biolo...
The CloudRoots field experiment was designed to obtain a comprehensive observational dataset that in...
Interactions among the atmosphere, terrestrial ecosystems, and the hydrological cycle have been the ...
Understanding the sensitivity of transpiration to stomatal conductance is critical to simulating the...
Canopy structure is one of the most important vegetation characteristics for land–atmosphere interac...
This thesis deals with the research question: which processes are relevant in controlling the exchan...