Forest Ecology. Dan Binkley

Forest Ecology - Dan Binkley


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emissivity of the ground exceeding that of the air, with a greater energy loss from the soil chilling the air at the ground surface.

      Source: Based on Kittredge 1948, with data from the US Forest Service.

      We can be very confident in the general trend of temperature in relation to latitude or incoming solar energy, as the 95% confidence intervals around the average trends are relatively tight. The actual temperatures for some locations fall substantially outside this confidence band, because the confidence band relates to the average trend, not to the dispersion of sites around the trend. What might explain why one site falls above the average trend, and another falls below? Temperatures also tend to be colder at higher elevations, and the third graph in Figure 2.12 shows that adding information on elevation can improve the prediction of temperature compared to latitude alone. Other factors are important too, including distances from oceans (which tend to moderate temperatures) and mountains (which limit the ability of oceans to affect temperatures).

Graphs depict average annual temperatures for sites around the world decline with increasing latitude (distance N or S from the Equator (top left). Latitude is a good predictor of temperature, but this is only a correlation not a process-based explanation.

Graph depicts air temperature increases with decreasing elevation because increasing air density leads to more frequent collisions among air molecules. Photos depict daily comparisons of high and low temperatures at locations that differ by 1500 m in elevation showed a general pattern that also included specific days that were higher or lower than the trend.

      Source: Data from Steven Fassnacht.


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