Using highly sensitive isotope analysis, team obtained detailed measurements of carbon exchange in temperate forest

Wednesday, June 29, 2016 - 12:01 in Earth & Climate

For the first time, scientists have been successful in measuring the processes by which an entire forest "breathes," using sophisticated technology involving flux towers and new instrumentation that can precisely measure two different types (isotopes) of carbon dioxide in the air. A team led by Richard Wehr and Scott Saleska at the University of Arizona obtained detailed long-term measurements of the respiration and photosynthesis rates of a temperate deciduous forest during the day and the night.

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