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@ARTICLE{Rebmann:859073,
author = {Rebmann, Corinna and Aubinet, Marc and Schmid, HaPe and
Arriga, Nicola and Aurela, Mika and Burba, George and
Clement, Robert and De Ligne, Anne and Fratini, Gerardo and
Gielen, Bert and Grace, John and Graf, Alexander and Gross,
Patrick and Haapanala, Sami and Herbst, Mathias and
Hörtnagl, Lukas and Ibrom, Andreas and Joly, Lilian and
Kljun, Natascha and Kolle, Olaf and Kowalski, Andrew and
Lindroth, Anders and Loustau, Denis and Mammarella, Ivan and
Mauder, Matthias and Merbold, Lutz and Metzger, Stefan and
Mölder, Meelis and Montagnani, Leonardo and Papale, Dario
and Pavelka, Marian and Peichl, Matthias and Roland, Marilyn
and Serrano-Ortiz, Penélope and Siebicke, Lukas and
Steinbrecher, Rainer and Tuovinen, Juha-Pekka and Vesala,
Timo and Wohlfahrt, Georg and Franz, Daniela},
title = {{ICOS} eddy covariance flux-station site setup: a review},
journal = {International agrophysics},
volume = {32},
number = {4},
issn = {2300-8725},
address = {Lublin},
publisher = {IA PAS},
reportid = {FZJ-2019-00024},
pages = {471 - 494},
year = {2018},
abstract = {The Integrated Carbon Observation System Re-search
Infrastructure aims to provide long-term, continuous
observations of sources and sinks of greenhouse gases such
as carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and water vapour.
At ICOS ecosystem stations, the principal technique for
measurements of ecosystem-atmosphere exchange of GHGs is the
eddy-covariance technique. The establishment and setup of an
eddy-covariance tower have to be carefully reasoned to
ensure high quality flux measurements being representative
of the investigated ecosystem and comparable to measurements
at other stations. To fulfill the requirements needed for
flux determination with the eddy-covariance technique,
variations in GHG concentrations have to be measured at high
frequency, simultaneously with the wind velocity, in order
to fully capture turbulent fluctuations. This requires the
use of high-frequency gas analysers and ultrasonic
anemometers. In addition, to analyse flux data with respect
to environmental conditions but also to enable corrections
in the post-processing procedures, it is necessary to
measure additional abiotic variables in close vicinity to
the flux measurements. Here we describe the standards the
ICOS ecosystem station network has adopted for GHG flux
measurements with respect to the setup of instrumentation on
towers to maximize measurement precision and accuracy while
allowing for flexibility in order to observe specific
ecosystem features.},
cin = {IBG-3},
ddc = {640},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IBG-3-20101118},
pnm = {255 - Terrestrial Systems: From Observation to Prediction
(POF3-255) / ICOS - Integrated Carbon Observation System
(211574) / IDAS-GHG - Instrumental and Data-driven
Approaches to Source-Partitioning of Greenhouse Gas Fluxes:
Comparison, Combination, Advancement (BMBF-01LN1313A) /
TERENO - Terrestrial Environmental Observatories
(TERENO-2008)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-255 / G:(EU-Grant)211574 /
G:(DE-Juel1)BMBF-01LN1313A / G:(DE-HGF)TERENO-2008},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000453410400003},
doi = {10.1515/intag-2017-0044},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/859073},
}