Field-based NDVI measurements at three adjacent tundra ecosystems at Imnavait Creek, Alaska, 2016-2022

This Arctic Observing Network (AON) project focuses on maintaining and expanding our long-term network of measurements of carbon, water, and energy exchange in terrestrial systems in Alaska. These exchanges help regulate the Arctic System and its feedbacks to global climate. Thus, extending long-ter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Syndonia Bret-Harte, Eugenie Euskirchen, Colin Edgar
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A24X54J1X
Description
Summary:This Arctic Observing Network (AON) project focuses on maintaining and expanding our long-term network of measurements of carbon, water, and energy exchange in terrestrial systems in Alaska. These exchanges help regulate the Arctic System and its feedbacks to global climate. Thus, extending long-term observations is a key science priority for the observing-change component of the Study of Environmental Arctic Change (SEARCH). Detecting and interpreting change in arctic carbon (C), water, and energy fluxes requires a continuous year-round record over multiple years. Recent data syntheses and modeling studies of Arctic Carbon balance suggest that tundra is either a carbon dioxide (CO2) sink, a source, or neutral (e.g., McGuire et al., 2009, McGuire et al., 2012) . This uncertainty arises mainly from a lack of data on winter CO2 flux and how tundra responds to recent warming. Because of harsh, remote environments and the lack of line power, long-term measurements of arctic CO2 fluxes over the full year are rare. We have been measuring year-round C, water, and energy fluxes for eleven years in two broadly representative flagship observatories with long-term histories of research, at Imnavait Creek near Toolik Lake, Alaska. To help interpret inter-annual variability we began making plot-based Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) measurements three times a summer at our Imnavait Creek sites.