Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska

We deployed three eddy covariance towers along a burn severity gradient (i.e. severely-, moderately-, and un-burned tundra) to monitor post fire Net Ecosystem Exchange of CO2 (NEE) within the large 2007 Anaktuvuk River fire scar during the summer of 2008. This data represents the first post fire gro...

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Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: ARC LTERThe Ecosystems CenterMarine Biological Lab7 MBL StWoods HoleMA02543USA(508) 289 7496arc_im@mbl.eduhttp://ecosystems.mbl.edu/ARC/ 2010
Subjects:
NEE
AON
Ice
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.15952
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-arc.10083.1/xml
id ftdryad:oai:v1.datadryad.org:10255/dryad.15952
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdryad:oai:v1.datadryad.org:10255/dryad.15952 2023-05-15T15:08:42+02:00 Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska Moderate burn flux tower site Anaktuvuk River burn, North Slope, Alaska The Arctic LTER research site (68°N and 149°W) is in the foothills region of the North Slope of Alaska and includes the entire Toolik Lake watershed and the adjacent watershed of the upper Kuparuk River, down to the confluence of these two watersheds. This area is typical of the northern foothills of the Brooks Range, with continuous permafrost, no trees, a complete snow cover for 7 to 9 months, winter ice cover on lakes, streams, and ocean, and cessation of river flow during the winter. Tussock tundra vegetation of sedges and grasses mixed with dwarf birch and low willows form the dominant vegetation type with areas of drier heath tundra on ridge tops and other well-drained sites as well as areas of river-bottom willow communities. 150.21 W 150.21 E 68.95 N 68.95 S -149.75 W -149.0433 E 68.8 N 68.5 S 2008-06-05 to 2008-08-29 2010 text/plain http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.15952 http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-arc.10083.1/xml unknown ARC LTERThe Ecosystems CenterMarine Biological Lab7 MBL StWoods HoleMA02543USA(508) 289 7496arc_im@mbl.eduhttp://ecosystems.mbl.edu/ARC/ http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-arc.10083.1/xml knb-lter-arc.10083.1 http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.15952 Acceptance and utilization of LTER data requires that:The Principal Investigator be sent a notice stating reasons for acquiring any data and a description of the publication intentions.The Principal Investigator of the data set be sent a copy of the report or manuscript prior to submission and be adequately cited in any resultant publicationsA copy of any resultant publications should be sent to: Principal Investigator Ecosystems Center Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, MA 02543 NEE Energy and Mass Exchange Anaktuvuk River fire AON disturbance Eddy flux dataset 2010 ftdryad 2020-01-01T14:34:32Z We deployed three eddy covariance towers along a burn severity gradient (i.e. severely-, moderately-, and un-burned tundra) to monitor post fire Net Ecosystem Exchange of CO2 (NEE) within the large 2007 Anaktuvuk River fire scar during the summer of 2008. This data represents the first post fire growing season's energy and mass exchange at the three sites. Dataset Arctic Brooks Range Dwarf birch Ice north slope permafrost Tundra Alaska Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University) Arctic Northern Foothills ENVELOPE(163.917,163.917,-74.733,-74.733)
institution Open Polar
collection Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University)
op_collection_id ftdryad
language unknown
topic NEE
Energy and Mass Exchange
Anaktuvuk River fire
AON
disturbance
Eddy flux
spellingShingle NEE
Energy and Mass Exchange
Anaktuvuk River fire
AON
disturbance
Eddy flux
Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
topic_facet NEE
Energy and Mass Exchange
Anaktuvuk River fire
AON
disturbance
Eddy flux
description We deployed three eddy covariance towers along a burn severity gradient (i.e. severely-, moderately-, and un-burned tundra) to monitor post fire Net Ecosystem Exchange of CO2 (NEE) within the large 2007 Anaktuvuk River fire scar during the summer of 2008. This data represents the first post fire growing season's energy and mass exchange at the three sites.
format Dataset
title Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
title_short Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
title_full Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
title_fullStr Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Anaktuvuk River Burn Eddy Flux Measurements, 2008 Moderate Burn Site, North Slope Alaska
title_sort anaktuvuk river burn eddy flux measurements, 2008 moderate burn site, north slope alaska
publisher ARC LTERThe Ecosystems CenterMarine Biological Lab7 MBL StWoods HoleMA02543USA(508) 289 7496arc_im@mbl.eduhttp://ecosystems.mbl.edu/ARC/
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.15952
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-arc.10083.1/xml
op_coverage Moderate burn flux tower site Anaktuvuk River burn, North Slope, Alaska
The Arctic LTER research site (68°N and 149°W) is in the foothills region of the North Slope of Alaska and includes the entire Toolik Lake watershed and the adjacent watershed of the upper Kuparuk River, down to the confluence of these two watersheds. This area is typical of the northern foothills of the Brooks Range, with continuous permafrost, no trees, a complete snow cover for 7 to 9 months, winter ice cover on lakes, streams, and ocean, and cessation of river flow during the winter. Tussock tundra vegetation of sedges and grasses mixed with dwarf birch and low willows form the dominant vegetation type with areas of drier heath tundra on ridge tops and other well-drained sites as well as areas of river-bottom willow communities.
150.21 W 150.21 E 68.95 N 68.95 S
-149.75 W -149.0433 E 68.8 N 68.5 S
2008-06-05 to 2008-08-29
long_lat ENVELOPE(163.917,163.917,-74.733,-74.733)
geographic Arctic
Northern Foothills
geographic_facet Arctic
Northern Foothills
genre Arctic
Brooks Range
Dwarf birch
Ice
north slope
permafrost
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Brooks Range
Dwarf birch
Ice
north slope
permafrost
Tundra
Alaska
op_relation http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/knb-lter-arc.10083.1/xml
knb-lter-arc.10083.1
http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.15952
op_rights Acceptance and utilization of LTER data requires that:The Principal Investigator be sent a notice stating reasons for acquiring any data and a description of the publication intentions.The Principal Investigator of the data set be sent a copy of the report or manuscript prior to submission and be adequately cited in any resultant publicationsA copy of any resultant publications should be sent to: Principal Investigator Ecosystems Center Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, MA 02543
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