Flux tower measurements processed with PyFluxPro (v3.4.23) produce gap-filled data on Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE), Gross Primary Productivity (GPP), and Ecosystem Respiration (ER). The site is an open woodland savanna co-dominated by Eucalyptus miniata and Eucalyptus tentrodonata, with an average tree height of 14-16 meters. Data includes heat, water vapor, carbon dioxide, temperature, humidity, wind, rainfall, and radiation measurements from a 23-meter mast.
Use Cases
- Modeling carbon sequestration and release based on partitioned Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) data.
- Studying ecosystem water use and energy balance based on evapotranspiration and radiation measurements.
- Analyzing seasonal climate impacts on vegetation based on temperature, precipitation, and soil moisture data.
- Calibrating remote sensing products for savanna biomes based on ground-truth flux measurements.
Strengths
- Data is processed into a final, gap-filled product using the established PyFluxPro (v3.4.23) software.
- Site characteristics are well-documented, including specific tree species, a 14-16m average canopy height, and 64m elevation.
- Comprehensive meteorological measurements include temperature, humidity, wind, rainfall, and multiple radiation components.
Limitations
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
- Row count and temporal coverage are unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
- Data freshness should be verified; last metadata update was 2026-05-22 07:43:26.630839.
Provenance
- Source
- Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network's Data Discovery
- Collection Method
- Eddy covariance techniques from a 23-meter flux tower, processed with PyFluxPro.
- Freshness
- Last updated 2026-05-22 07:43:26.630839; freshness should be verified.
- Geography
- Howard Springs, Australia, an open woodland savanna site at approximately 64m elevation.