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Dive into the research topics where Eric Lamaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Lamaud.


Atmospheric Environment | 2002

Ozone fluxes above and within a pine forest canopy in dry and wet conditions

Eric Lamaud; A. Carrara; Yves Brunet; A. Lopez; A. Druilhet

Abstract The physiological and physical processes controlling ozone dry deposition to vegetated surfaces are still not fully understood. In particular, the role of the understorey and the possible action of dew on ozone deposition have not received much attention so far. This paper presents the results of an experiment aimed at quantifying ozone dry deposition to a maritime pine forest in the “Les Landes” area in France. Ozone deposition fluxes were measured using the eddy-covariance technique above and within the canopy. We investigate the factors acting on ozone deposition in both dew-wetted and dry conditions. The values obtained for the ozone deposition velocity are well in the range of previously published measurements over coniferous forests. For the present forest, ozone uptake by the understorey is a significant portion of ozone deposition to the whole pine stand. The understorey contributes more to the overall ozone flux than to the other measured scalar fluxes (sensible heat and water vapour). During dry nights the surface conductance for ozone and the friction velocity are strongly correlated, showing that ozone deposition is largely controlled by dynamical processes. During the day, in dry conditions, the canopy stomatal conductance is the major parameter controlling ozone deposition. However, in winter, when the stomatal conductance is low, the influence of dynamical processes persists during day-time. It is also found that surface wetness associated with dew significantly enhances ozone deposition, during the night as well as in the morning.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2001

A long-term study of soil heat flux under a forest canopy

Jérôme Ogée; Eric Lamaud; Yves Brunet; Paul Berbigier; Jean-Marc Bonnefond

International programmes such as EUROFLUX focus on the analysis of long-term fluxes and energy budgets in the biosphere. Reliable estimates of hourly energy budgets require an accurate estimation of soil heat flux, that is often non-negligible even in a forest, and can be predominant during the night. Over long periods of time such as one to several months, its contribution can also be significant. The present work has been carried out to get good estimates of the soil heat flux in a maritime pine stand in the southwest of France, one of the 15 EUROFLUX sites. Using a whole year’s worth of data, soil heat flux was estimated by a two-step version of the null-alignment method using soil temperature, water content and bulk density measurements between the soil surface and a depth of 1 m. A data subset was firstly used to estimate and model the soil thermal conductivity at various depths. The full data set was then used with the modelled conductivity to estimate heat storage between the surface and a reference depth, and calculate the heat flux at the soil surface. Throughout the investigated year and at a 30 min time scale, the soil heat flux represents 5‐10% of the incident net radiation, i.e. 30‐50% of the net radiation over the understorey. Cumulative values from September 1997 to March 1998 reach a maximum of 70 MJ m 2 , which represents nearly 50% of the cumulative values of transmitted net radiation (140 MJ m 2 ) over the same period. These estimates of soil heat flux allowed the energy budgets of the whole stand and the understorey to be closed, and showed that the storage terms are significant not only at a 30 min time scale but also at longer time scales (a few weeks). An attempt was finally made to model soil heat flux from meteorological data, which has rarely been done for a forest soil and over a long-term data set. In most of the existing models, soil heat flux is taken as a fraction of net radiation or sensible heat flux. Here, the litter acts as a mulch at the soil surface so that the only significant terms of the energy balance at this level are soil heat flux, transmitted net radiation and turbulent sensible heat flux. Soil heat flux is shown to be a linear combination of (1) net radiation above the understorey with a clear dependence of the coefficient on the soil cover fraction, and (2) the difference between the air and litter temperatures, with little influence of soil water content or wind speed on the coefficient.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1994

The Landes experiment: Biosphere-atmosphere exchanges of ozone and aerosol particles above a pine forest

Eric Lamaud; Yves Brunet; A. Labatut; A. Lopez; Jacques Fontan; A. Druilhet

An experiment was conducted in a pine forest in southwestern France during late spring 1992. The aim was fourfold: testing various flux measurement methodologies for chemically reactive species; quantifying the exchanges between the forest and the atmosphere; analyzing the involved mechanisms; and studying their influence on the chemistry of the surface boundary layer. This paper presents preliminary results obtained on the dry deposition of ozone and submicronic aerosol particles, measured using eddy correlation. Once properly normalized, the spectra and cospectra of all scalar species exhibit universal shapes over the whole frequency range. However, evidence is provided that under some meteorological conditions the time series of turbulent variables can be affected by nonstationary trends, or low-frequency fluctuations that do not contribute to vertical transfer but whose presence can induce large errors in the calculated fluxes. The time variations of the deposition velocities for ozone and aerosol particles are then presented over 2 days with different meteorological conditions. The deposition velocities are shown to be consistent with other reported studies. Dry deposition of ozone appears to be mainly governed by the stomatal resistance, whereas friction velocity and atmospheric instability in the boundary layer seem to govern the deposition of aerosol particles.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2001

Validation of eddy flux measurements above the understorey of a pine forest

Eric Lamaud; Jérôme Ogée; Yves Brunet; Paul Berbigier

Measurements of turbulent exchange in the understorey of a forest canopy are necessary to understand and model both the functioning of the lower stratum and its contribution to turbulent exchange at the whole canopy scale. Eddy covariance measurements of eddy fluxes just above the floor of a forest canopy must be thoroughly validated, given the particular conditions prevailing there. Our objective is two-fold: (i) check the overall quality of such eddy flux measurements through the analysis of the understorey energy balance closure and (ii) define quality criteria for each half-hourly sample, based on the residual term of the energy balance. A subset of the EUROFLUX data base, collected within a pine forest canopy in south-west France, was used for this purpose. During this experiment, all heat storage terms were carefully measured, which allowed the closure of the understorey energy balance to be rigorously tested. As in most experiments storage term measurements are not available, we also developed a method to estimate them, in order to apply the above-mentioned data selection method. The energy balance closure was found to be quite satisfactory (the slope of the sum of eddy fluxes and storage terms versus transmitted net radiation is 0.99, the intercept is less than 1 W m 2 , r 2 is 0.94, there is no deviation from a linear trend). The data selection procedure allows a fair description of the daily and day-to-day variation of turbulent fluxes while rejecting the most dubious data, whether experimental or estimated storage terms are used. This analysis proves the validity of eddy flux measurements in the lower part of the forest and offers tools for flux data selection, depending on the type of studies such data are intended for.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2012

Turbulent Structures in a Pine Forest with a Deep and Sparse Trunk Space: Stand and Edge Regions

Sylvain Dupont; M. Irvine; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; Eric Lamaud; Yves Brunet

Forested landscapes often exhibit large spatial variability in vertical and horizontal foliage distributions. This variability may affect canopy-atmosphere exchanges through its action on the development of turbulent structures. Here we investigate in neutral stratification the turbulent structures encountered in a maritime pine forest characterized by a high, dense foliated layer associated with a deep and sparse trunk space. Both stand and edge regions are considered. In situ measurements and the results of large-eddy simulations are used and analyzed together. In stand conditions, far from the edge, canopy-top structures appear strongly damped by the dense crown layer. Turbulent wind fluctuations within the trunk space, where the momentum flux vanishes, are closely related to these canopy-top structures through pressure diffusion. Consequently, autocorrelation and spectral analyses are not quite appropriate to characterize the vertical scale of coherent structures in this type of canopy, as pressure diffusion enhances the actual scale of structures. At frequencies higher than those associated with canopy-top structures, wind fluctuations related to wake structures developing behind tree stems are observed within the trunk space. They manifest themselves in wind velocity spectra as secondary peaks in the inertial subrange region, confirming the hypothesis of spectral short-cuts in vegetation canopies. In the edge region specific turbulent structures develop just below the crown layer, in addition to canopy-top structures. They are generated by the wind shear induced by the sub-canopy wind jet that forms at the edge. These structures provide a momentum exchange mechanism similar to that observed at the canopy top but in the opposite direction and with a lower magnitude. They may develop as in plane mixing-layer flows, with some perturbations induced by canopy-top structures. Wake structures are also observed within the trunk space in the edge region.


Tree Physiology | 2011

Paired comparison of water, energy and carbon exchanges over two young maritime pine stands (Pinus pinaster Ait.): effects of thinning and weeding in the early stage of tree growth.

Virginie Moreaux; Eric Lamaud; Alexandre Bosc; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; Belinda E. Medlyn; Denis Loustau

The effects of management practices on energy, water and carbon exchanges were investigated in a young pine plantation in south-west France. In 2009-10, carbon dioxide (CO(2)), H(2)O and heat fluxes were monitored using the eddy covariance and sap flow techniques in a control plot (C) with a developed gorse layer, and an adjacent plot that was mechanically weeded and thinned (W). Despite large differences in the total leaf area index and canopy structure, the annual net radiation absorbed was only 4% lower in plot W. We showed that higher albedo in this plot was offset by lower emitted long-wave radiation. Annual evapotranspiration (ET) from plot W was 15% lower, due to lower rainfall interception and transpiration by the tree canopy, partly counterbalanced by the larger evaporation from both soil and regrowing weedy vegetation. The drainage belowground from plot W was larger by 113 mm annually. The seasonal variability of ET was driven by the dynamics of the soil and weed layers, which was more severely affected by drought in plot C. Conversely, the temporal changes in pine transpiration and stem diameter growth were synchronous between sites despite higher soil water content in the weeded plot. At the annual scale, both plots were carbon sinks, but thinning and weeding reduced the carbon uptake by 73%: annual carbon uptake was 243 and 65 g C m(-2) on plots C and W, respectively. Summer drought dramatically impacted the net ecosystem exchange: plot C became a carbon source as the gross primary production (GPP) severely decreased. However, plot W remained a carbon sink during drought, as a result of decreases in both GPP and ecosystem respiration (R(E)). In winter, both plots were carbon sources, plots C and W emitting 67.5 and 32.4 g C m(-2), respectively. Overall, this study highlighted the significant contribution of the gorse layer to mass and energy exchange in young pine plantations.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2007

Partitioning forest carbon fluxes with overstory and understory eddy-covariance measurements : A synthesis based on FLUXNET data

Laurent Misson; Dennis D. Baldocchi; T.A. Black; Peter D. Blanken; Yves Brunet; J. Curiel Yuste; J. R. Dorsey; Matthias Falk; A. Granier; M. Irvine; Nathalie Jarosz; Eric Lamaud; Samuli Launiainen; Beverly E. Law; Bernard Longdoz; Denis Loustau; M. McKay; Timo Vesala; Dean Vickers; Kell B. Wilson; Allen H. Goldstein


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2011

Long-distance edge effects in a pine forest with a deep and sparse trunk space: In situ and numerical experiments

Sylvain Dupont; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; M. Irvine; Eric Lamaud; Yves Brunet


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2006

Temperature–Humidity Dissimilarity and Heat-to-water-vapour Transport Efficiency Above and Within a Pine Forest Canopy: the Role of the Bowen Ratio

Eric Lamaud; M. Irvine


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2009

Partitioning of ozone deposition over a developed maize crop between stomatal and non-stomatal uptakes, using eddy-covariance flux measurements and modelling

Eric Lamaud; Benjamin Loubet; M. Irvine; Patrick Stella; Erwan Personne; Pierre Cellier

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M. Irvine

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Marc Bonnefond

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yves Brunet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Denis Loustau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Cellier

Université Paris-Saclay

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Sylvain Dupont

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jérôme Ogée

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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