Browsing by Subject "Energy"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Publication Interactions between protea plants and their animal mutualists and antagonists are structured more by energetic than morphological trait matching(2022) Neu, Alexander; Cooksley, Huw; Esler, Karen J.; Pauw, Anton; Roets, Francois; Schurr, Frank M.; Schleuning, MatthiasTraits mediate mutualistic and antagonistic interactions between plants and animals, and should thus be useful for predicting trophic species interactions. Studies to date have examined the importance of morphological trait matching for plant–animal interactions, but have rarely explored the extent to which these interactions are shaped by matching between energetic provisions of plants and energetic demands of animals. We tested whether energetic and/or morphological trait matching shapes interactions between Protea plant species and their interacting animal mutualists and antagonists in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa. We recorded interactions between 22 Protea species, pollinating insects and vertebrates as well as seed predators (endophagous insect larvae in protea cones) at 21 study sites. To relate species interactions to matching trait pairs, we measured key morphological traits (shape and size of flower heads and seed cones, and mouth part length as well as body length) and quantified the animals' energetic demands (metabolic rate) together with the plants' energetic provisions (nectar sugar amount, seed‐to‐cone mass ratio). We calculated log ratios of both energetic and morphological traits between animals and plants as predictor variables for the number of observed interactions between Protea species and their animal interaction partners. For both mutualistic and antagonistic interactions, we found significant effects of morphological and energetic trait ratios on the interactions between plants and animals. Trait ratios accounted for 11% to 22% of variation in species interactions. Consistent with energetic trait matching, we found a hump‐shaped relationship between interaction frequency and log ratios of energetic traits of animals and plants, indicating that interactions were most frequent at intermediate log ratios between energetic demand and provision. Effects of morphological trait ratios on interactions were statistically supported in most cases, but were variable in the magnitude and shape of the predicted relationships. Across animal taxa and interaction types, energetic traits had more consistent effects on interactions between plants and animals than morphological traits. This suggests that energy can function as an important interaction currency and facilitate the understanding and prediction of trophic species interactions.Publication Turbulent exchange of energy, water and carbon between crop canopies and the atmosphere : an evaluation of multi-year, multi-site eddy covariance data(2019) Eshonkulov, Ravshan; Streck, ThiloThe increase of anthropogenic CO2 emissions and other greenhouse gases has raised concern about climate change. Climate change has manifold impacts on yield and yield quality, crop rotations, carbon and nitrogen cycling, water regime and agricultural production systems. To understand its consequences on environmental systems, measuring the matter and energy exchange at the land surface provides data to help validate and inform a wide range of process models. Such flux measurements at the land-surface provide an opportunity to test simulations of processes in the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum. Currently, such measurements are mainly based on the eddy covariance (EC) method, for the quality of which the energy balance closure (EBC) is a problem. The EBC significantly influences the calibration and validity of land-surface models, especially in regard to the energy and water balance at the Earth’s surface. The EBC quantifies the deviation between turbulent fluxes and available energy. It is crucial to obtain high-quality EC measurements to determine the reasons for the EBC. The research aims of this dissertation were: 1) to clarify the role of minor storage and flux terms in the energy balance, 2) to determine the possible reasons for the energy imbalance using a long-term dataset (2010-2017) from agricultural croplands, and 3) to investigate the effects of region, site, year and crop type on carbon fluxes and budgets. In the first study (Chapter 2) the contribution of minor storage terms to the EBC were investigated. I also determined the contribution of ground heat fluxes calculated by different methods. A harmonic analysis method was used to calculate ground heat fluxes from measurements of heat flux plates and soil temperature sensors. Soil heat storage and enthalpy change in the plant canopy were determined at different locations within the EC footprint. Considering minor storage terms improved the energy balance closure on average by 5.0 % in 2015 and by 6.8 % in 2016. The greatest energy balance closure improvement occurred in May of both study years. The dominant fraction of minor energy storage was energy uptake and release through photosynthesis and respiration. Additionally, the energy fluxes related to soil temperature change were also observed. The ground heat flux calculated by harmonic analysis from soil heat flux plates narrowed the EBC by 3 % compared to the calorimetric method. The results indicated that the typical correction approach to achieve energy balance closure, i.e. the Bowen-ratio method, overestimated the turbulent fluxes. The second study (Chapter 3) investigated the effects of crop type, site characteristics, wind directions, atmospheric conditions and footprint on the EBC. The long-term evaluation of EC measurements showed that, with the EC method, 25 % of the available energy could not be detected. Decreasing the flux footprint area increases the chance of a more homogeneous area. Homogeneity plays an important role in achieving a better energy balance closure. The synthesis of long-term EC data indicated that the sonic anemometer is very sensitive to orientation, not allowing accurate measurements from all wind directions. Discarding the measurements from wind directions 0° and 90° at EC4 improved the EBC from 80 to 84 %. In the third study, presented in Chapter 4, a long-term and multi-site experiment was evaluated to clarify the effects of site, year and region on the CO2 fluxes and budgets in agroecosystems. The net ecosystem exchange of CO2 fluxes – measured on six sites during eight years – was comprehensively examined. Winter rapeseed had the lowest CO2 uptake, cropping of silage maize resulted in the highest C losses. The management of harvest residues was the most effective means of controlling the C budgets. Comparing the CO2 fluxes processed with the recently developed ogive optimization method versus the conventional calculation showed that eliminating low-frequency contributions had a considerable effect. On average, the ogive optimization method delivered 6.9 % higher net ecosystem exchange rates than the conventional method. This dissertation provides new insights into how to obtain better measurements of matter and energy fluxes from EC measurements by a) considering storage terms otherwise neglected, b) using harmonic analysis for calculating ground heat fluxes, c) discarding fluxes from behind the anemometer and d) applying the ogive optimization method.