Alois Haslwanter
University of Innsbruck
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Featured researches published by Alois Haslwanter.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008
Georg Wohlfahrt; Albin Hammerle; Alois Haslwanter; Michael Bahn; Ulrike Tappeiner; Alexander Cernusca
The role and relative importance of climate and cutting for the seasonal and inter-annual variability of the net ecosystem CO2 (NEE) of a temperate mountain grassland was investigated. Eddy covariance CO2 flux data and associated measurements of the green area index and the major environmental driving forces acquired during 2001-2006 at the study site Neustift (Austria) were analyzed. Driven by three cutting events per year which kept the investigated grassland in a stage of vigorous growth, the seasonal variability of NEE was primarily modulated by gross primary productivity (GPP). The role of environmental parameters in modulating the seasonal variability of NEE was obscured by the strong response of GPP to changes in the amount of green area, as well as the cutting-mediated decoupling of phenological development and the seasonal course of climate drivers. None of the climate and management metrics examined was able to explain the inter-annual variability of annual NEE. This is thought to result from (1) a high covariance between GPP and ecosystem respiration (Reco) at the annual time scale which results in a comparatively small inter-annual variation of NEE, (2) compensating effects between carbon exchange during and outside the management period, and (3) changes in the biotic response to rather than the climate variables per se. GPP was more important in modulating inter-annual variations in NEE in spring and before the first and second cut, while Reco explained a larger fraction of the inter-annual variability of NEE during the remaining, in particular the post-cut, periods.
Ecosystems | 2008
Georg Wohlfahrt; Margaret Anderson-Dunn; Michael Bahn; Manuela Balzarolo; Frank Berninger; Claire Campbell; Arnaud Carrara; Alessandro Cescatti; Torben R. Christensen; Sabina Dore; Werner Eugster; Thomas Friborg; Markus Furger; Damiano Gianelle; Cristina Gimeno; K.J. Hargreaves; Pertti Hari; Alois Haslwanter; Torbjörn Johansson; Barbara Marcolla; C. Milford; Zoltán Nagy; E. Nemitz; Nele Rogiers; M. J. Sanz; Rolf T. W. Siegwolf; Sanna Susiluoto; Mark A. Sutton; Zoltán Tuba; Francesca Ugolini
The net ecosystem carbon dioxide (CO2) exchange (NEE) of nine European mountain grassland ecosystems was measured during 2002–2004 using the eddy covariance method. Overall, the availability of photosynthetically active radiation (PPFD) was the single most important abiotic influence factor for NEE. Its role changed markedly during the course of the season, PPFD being a better predictor for NEE during periods favorable for CO2 uptake, which was spring and autumn for the sites characterized by summer droughts (southern sites) and (peak) summer for the Alpine and northern study sites. This general pattern was interrupted by grassland management practices, that is, mowing and grazing, when the variability in NEE explained by PPFD decreased in concert with the amount of aboveground biomass (BMag). Temperature was the abiotic influence factor that explained most of the variability in ecosystem respiration at the Alpine and northern study sites, but not at the southern sites characterized by a pronounced summer drought, where soil water availability and the amount of aboveground biomass were more or equally important. The amount of assimilating plant area was the single most important biotic variable determining the maximum ecosystem carbon uptake potential, that is, the NEE at saturating PPFD. Good correspondence, in terms of the magnitude of NEE, was observed with many (semi-) natural grasslands around the world, but not with grasslands sown on fertile soils in lowland locations, which exhibited higher maximum carbon gains at lower respiratory costs. It is concluded that, through triggering rapid changes in the amount and area of the aboveground plant matter, the timing and frequency of land management practices is crucial for the short-term sensitivity of the NEE of the investigated mountain grassland ecosystems to climatic drivers.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2008
Georg Wohlfahrt; Albin Hammerle; Alois Haslwanter; Michael Bahn; Ulrike Tappeiner; Alexander Cernusca
There is an ongoing discussion about why the net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) of some ecosystems is less sensitive to diffuse radiation than others and about the role other environmental factors play in determining the response of NEE to diffuse radiation. Using a six-year data set from a temperate mountain grassland in Austria we show that differences between ecosystems may be reconciled based on their green area index (GAI; square meter green plant area per square meter ground area) - the sensitivity to diffuse radiation increasing with GAI. Our data suggest diffuse radiation to have a negligible influence on NEE below a GAI of 2 m2 m-2. Changes in air/soil temperature and air humidity concurrent with the fraction of diffuse radiation were found to amplify the sensitivity of the investigated temperate mountain grassland ecosystem to diffuse radiation.
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2005
Georg Wohlfahrt; Christian Anfang; Michael Bahn; Alois Haslwanter; Christian Newesely; Michael Schmitt; Matthias Drösler; Jörg Pfadenhauer; Alexander Cernusca
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2005
Georg Wohlfahrt; Michael Bahn; Alois Haslwanter; Christian Newesely; Alexander Cernusca
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2009
Alois Haslwanter; Albin Hammerle; Georg Wohlfahrt
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2007
Albin Hammerle; Alois Haslwanter; Michael Schmitt; Michael Bahn; Ulrike Tappeiner; Alexander Cernusca; Georg Wohlfahrt
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2009
Georg Wohlfahrt; Alois Haslwanter; Lukas Hörtnagl; Richard L. Jasoni; Lynn F. Fenstermaker; John A. Arnone; Albin Hammerle
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2011
Federico Brilli; Lukas Hörtnagl; Albin Hammerle; Alois Haslwanter; Armin Hansel; Francesco Loreto; Georg Wohlfahrt
Archive | 2007
Georg Wohlfahrt; Albin Hammerle; Alois Haslwanter; Michael Bahn; Ulrike Tappeiner; Alexander Cernusca