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Tower_team:
PI: Dong Wang dong.wang@ars.usda.gov - USDA - Agricultural Research Service, San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center, Water Management Research Unit
PI: Ray Anderson ray.anderson@ars.usda.gov - USDA-Agricultural Research Service, United States Salinity Laboratory, Contaminant Fate and Transport Unit
Lat, Long: 20.7847, -156.4039
Elevation(m): 203
Network Affiliations: AmeriFlux
Vegetation IGBP: CRO (Croplands: Lands covered with temporary crops followed by harvest and a bare soil period (e.g., single and multiple cropping systems). Note that perennial woody crops will be classified as the appropriate forest or shrub land cover type.)
Climate Koeppen: Aw (Tropical savanna)
Mean Annual Temp (°C): 24.4
Mean Annual Precip. (mm): 334
Flux Species Measured: CO2, H, H2O
Years Data Collected: 2011 - 2013
Years Data Available:

AmeriFlux BASE 2011 - 2014   Data Citation

Data Use Policy:AmeriFlux CC-BY-4.0 Policy1
Description:
Continuous, irrigated, sugarcane cultivation for >100 years. Practice is to grow plant sugarcane for 2 years, drydown, burn leaves, harvest cane, and ...
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URL:
Research Topics: biofuels, crop water use, soil carbon sequestration
Acknowledgment:
Site Tasks
  1. This site’s data can also be used under the more restrictive AmeriFlux Legacy Policy.
    The AmeriFlux Legacy Policy must be followed if this site’s data are combined with data from sites that require the AmeriFlux Legacy Policy.
Site Photo More Site Images
Image Credit: Ray Anderson, 08/31/2011
Copyright preference: As long as credit is given
Site Publication More Site Publications

Use the information below for citation of this site. See the Data Policy page for more details.

DOI(s) for citing US-SuS data

Data Use Policy: AmeriFlux CC-BY-4.0 License

This site’s data can also be used under the more restrictive AmeriFlux Legacy Policy.
The AmeriFlux Legacy Policy must be followed if US-SuS data are combined with data from sites that require the AmeriFlux Legacy Policy.

  • AmeriFlux BASE: https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1246159
    Citation: Dong Wang, Ray Anderson (2019), AmeriFlux BASE US-SuS Maui Sugarcane Lee/Sheltered, Ver. 2-5, AmeriFlux AMP, (Dataset). https://doi.org/10.17190/AMF/1246159

To cite BADM when downloaded on their own, use the publications below for citing site characterization. When using BADM that are downloaded with AmeriFlux BASE and AmeriFlux FLUXNET products, use the DOI citation for the associated data product.

Publication(s) for citing site characterization

Acknowledgments

Resources

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Note: Results are the number of downloads to distinct data users. The Download Count column indicates the number of times the data user downloaded the data. The Version column refers to the version of the data product for the site that was downloaded by the data user.

Year Range

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Year Publication
2015 Anderson, R. G., Wang, D., Tirado-Corbalá, R., Zhang, H., Ayars, J. E. (2015) Divergence Of Actual And Reference Evapotranspiration Observations For Irrigated Sugarcane With Windy Tropical Conditions, Hydrology And Earth System Sciences, 19(1), 583-599. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-19-583-2015
2014 Anderson, R. G., Wang, D. (2014) Energy Budget Closure Observed In Paired Eddy Covariance Towers With Increased And Continuous Daily Turbulence, Agricultural And Forest Meteorology, 184, 204-209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agrformet.2013.09.012
2015 Anderson, R. G., Tirado-Corbalá, R., Wang, D., Ayars, J. E. (2015) Long-Rotation Sugarcane In Hawaii Sustains High Carbon Accumulation And Radiation Use Efficiency In 2nd Year Of Growth, Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 199, 216-224. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2014.09.012

BADM for This Site

Access the Biological, Ancillary, Disturbance and Metadata (BADM) information and data for this site.

BADM contain information for many uses, such as characterizing a site’s vegetation and soil, describing disturbance history, and defining instrumentation for flux processing. They complement the flux/met data.

* Online updates are shown on the Overview tab real time. However, downloaded BADM files will not reflect those updates until they have been reviewed for QA/QC.

Wind Roses

Click an image below to enlarge it, or use the navigation panel.
  • Image scale: 949m x 949m
  • Data Collected:
  • Wind roses use variables ‘WS’ and ‘WD’.
    Download Data Download Wind Rose as Image File (PNG)

    Wind Speed (m/s)

  • Graph Type
  • Wind Speed Scale
  • Wind Direction Scale (%)
  • Show Satellite Image
  • Show Wind Rose
  • Annual Average
    About Ameriflux Wind Roses
    Wind Rose Explanation
    wind rose gives a succinct view of how wind speed and direction are typically distributed at a particular location. Presented in a circular format, a wind rose shows the frequency and intensity of winds blowing from particular directions. The length of each “spoke” around the circle indicates the amount of time (frequency) that the wind blows from a particular direction. Colors along the spokes indicate categories of wind speed (intensity). Each concentric circle represents a different frequency, emanating from zero at the center to increasing frequencies at the outer circles
    Utility
    This information can be useful to gain insight into regions surrounding a flux tower that contribute to the measured fluxes, and how those regions change in dependence of the time of day and season. The wind roses presented here are for four periods of the year, and in 16 cardinal directions. Graphics are available for all sites in the AmeriFlux network based on reported wind measurements at each site.
    Data from each site can be downloaded by clicking the ‘download’ button.
    Hover the cursor over a wind rose to obtain directions, speeds and intensities.
    Note that wind roses are not equivalent to flux footprints. Specifically, the term flux footprint describes an upwind area “seen” by the instruments measuring vertical turbulent fluxes, such that heat, water, gas and momentum transport generated in this area is registered by the instruments. Wind roses, on the other hand, identify only the direction and speed of wind.
    Where do these data come from?
    The wind roses are based on observed hourly data from the sites registered with the AmeriFlux Network.
    Parameters for AmeriFlux Wind Roses
    To use wind roses for a single AmeriFlux site, the following parameters may be most useful:
    • Wind Speed Scale: Per Site
    • Wind Direction Scale (%): Per Site
    To compare wind roses from more than one single AmeriFlux site, the following parameters may be most useful:
    • Wind Speed Scale: Non-Linear
    • Wind Direction Scale (%): AmeriFlux
    Mar - Jun; 6am - 6pm
    Mar - Jun; 6pm - 6am
    Jun - Sep; 6am - 6pm
    Jun - Sep; 6pm - 6am
    Sep - Dec; 6am - 6pm
    Sep - Dec; 6pm - 6am
    Dec - Mar; 6am - 6pm
    Dec - Mar; 6pm - 6am