Partitioning of sensible and latent heat fluxes in different vegetation
types and their spatiotemporal variations based on 203 FLUXNET sites
Abstract
Bowen ratio reflects the partitioning between sensible and latent heat
fluxes and plays a crucial role in land-atmosphere interaction. In this
study, the spatiotemporal variations of Bowen ratio among 12 vegetation
types were analyzed using observations from 203 FLUXNET sites worldwide
and compared against Community Land Model. Results showed that the
annual mean Bowen ratio across all sites was 1.48 ± 1.20 (mean ± SD).
Sites with Bowen ratios less than 1 (39%, 80 sites) were found across
all continents, and the ones with higher Bowen ratios
(>3)(7%, 14 sites) appeared in dry and warm areas. Open
shrublands showed the highest Bowen ratio (3.04 ± 0.58), whereas
wetlands showed the lowest (0.74 ± 0.09). In terms of seasonality, Bowen
ratio showed a U-curve with lower values in local summer and higher in
spring and autumn in the northern hemisphere; the opposite occurred in
the southern hemisphere. The spatiotemporal variations in Bowen ratio
can be explained by climatic, geographical, and biological factors, with
climate factors having the greatest impact. Bowen ratio increased under
higher VPD (R = 0.45) and hotter (R=0.14) conditions with more shortwave
radiation (R=0.39), and decreased with higher precipitation (R=-0.34),
albedo (R=-0.16), and leaf area index (R=-0.25). CLM well reproduced the
global annual mean Bowen ratio, but showed larger differences for
certain vegetations types such as open shrublands (-1.51), woody
savannas (+0.98). Our results could enhance our understanding of biotic
and environmental controls on land surface energy fluxes and help
improve land surface and climate models.