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Dive into the research topics where Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson is active.

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Featured researches published by Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Species‐specific transpiration responses to intermediate disturbance in a northern hardwood forest

Ashley M. Matheny; Gil Bohrer; Christoph S. Vogel; Timothy H. Morin; Lingli He; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Golnazalsadat Mirfenderesgi; Karina V. R. Schäfer; Christopher M. Gough; Valeriy Y. Ivanov; Peter S. Curtis

Intermediate disturbances shape forest structure and composition, which may in turn alter carbon, nitrogen, and water cycling. We used a large-scale experiment in a forest in northern lower Michigan where we prescribed an intermediate disturbance by stem girdling all canopy-dominant early successional trees to simulate an accelerated age-related senescence associated with natural succession. Using 3 years of eddy covariance and sap flux measurements in the disturbed area and an adjacent control plot, we analyzed disturbance-induced changes to plot level and species-specific transpiration and stomatal conductance. We found transpiration to be ~15% lower in disturbed plots than in unmanipulated control plots. However, species-specific responses to changes in microclimate varied. While red oak and white pine showed increases in stomatal conductance during postdisturbance (62.5 and 132.2%, respectively), red maple reduced stomatal conductance by 36.8%. We used the hysteresis between sap flux and vapor pressure deficit to quantify diurnal hydraulic stress incurred by each species in both plots. Red oak, a ring porous anisohydric species, demonstrated the largest mean relative hysteresis, while red maple, bigtooth aspen, and paper birch, all diffuse porous species, had the lowest relative hysteresis. We employed the Penman-Monteith model for LE to demonstrate that these species-specific responses to disturbance are not well captured using current modeling strategies and that accounting for changes to leaf area index and plot microclimate are insufficient to fully describe the effects of disturbance on transpiration.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Environmental drivers of methane fluxes from an urban temperate wetland park

Timothy H. Morin; Gil Bohrer; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; L. Naor‐Azreli; S. Mesi; Kay C. Stefanik; Karina V. R. Schäfer

Methane (CH4) emissions were measured at the Wilma H. Schiermeier Olentangy River Wetland Research Park (ORWRP) over three summers and two winters using an eddy covariance system. We used an empirical model to determine the main environmental drivers of methane emissions. Methane emissions covary strongly with water vapor fluxes, CO2 fluxes, and soil temperature. We adjust our models to account for the heterogeneous environment of the wetland by including the flux footprint distribution among different microsites as a predictive variable in the methane model. We used a forward linear stepwise model in combination with an Akaike information criteria-based model selection process and neural network modeling to determine which environmental variables are most effective in modeling methane emissions in our site. Different models and environmental variables best represented methane fluxes in the winter and summer and also during the day or night within each season. We parameterized an optimal empirical model for methane emissions from the ORWRP that is used for gap filling of site-level methane fluxes over 2 years. Some of the most effective variables for modeling methane were carbon, water vapor, and heat fluxes, all of which typically have the same data gaps as the time series of methane flux. In order to determine if these variables were useful for modeling methane despite the additional gap-filling error, we determined through an error propagation experiment that eddy covariance gap-filling models for methane may be best developed by including other gap-filled fluxes as predictors, despite the high level of shared gaps and subsequent gap-fill error propagation.


Water Resources Research | 2016

An intercomparison of remote sensing river discharge estimation algorithms from measurements of river height, width, and slope

Michael Durand; Colin J. Gleason; Pierre-André Garambois; David M. Bjerklie; Laurence C. Smith; Hélène Roux; Ernesto Rodriguez; Paul D. Bates; Tamlin M. Pavelsky; Jérôme Monnier; X. Chen; G. Di Baldassarre; J.-M. Fiset; Nicolas Flipo; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; J. Fulton; N. Goutal; Faisal Hossain; E. Humphries; J. T. Minear; Micah Mukolwe; Jeffrey C. Neal; Sophie Ricci; Brett F. Sanders; Gj-P Schumann; Jochen E. Schubert; Lauriane Vilmin

The Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite mission planned for launch in 2020 will map river elevations and inundated area globally for rivers >100 m wide. In advance of this launch, we here evaluated the possibility of estimating discharge in ungauged rivers using synthetic, daily ‘‘remote sensing’’ measurements derived from hydraulic models corrupted with minimal observational errors. Five discharge algorithms were evaluated, as well as the median of the five, for 19 rivers spanning a range of hydraulic and geomorphic conditions. Reliance upon a priori information, and thus applicability to truly ungauged reaches, varied among algorithms: one algorithm employed only global limits on velocity and depth, while the other algorithms relied on globally available prior estimates of discharge. We found at least one algorithm able to estimate instantaneous discharge to within 35% relative root-mean-squared error (RRMSE) on 14/16 nonbraided rivers despite out-of-bank flows, multichannel planforms, and backwater effects. Moreover, we found RRMSE was often dominated by bias; the median standard deviation of relative residuals across the 16 nonbraided rivers was only 12.5%. SWOT discharge algorithm progress is therefore encouraging, yet future efforts should consider incorporating ancillary data or multialgorithm synergy to improve results.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

Using High-Resolution GPS Tracking Data of Bird Flight for Meteorological Observations

Gil Bohrer; Judy Shamoun-Baranes; Olivier Duriez; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Willem Bouten

AbstractBird flight is strongly influenced by local meteorological conditions. With increasing amounts of high-frequency GPS data of bird movement becoming available, as tags become cheaper and lighter, opportunities are created to obtain large datasets of quantitative meteorological information from observations conducted by bird-borne tags. In this article we propose a method for estimating wind velocity and convective velocity scale from tag-based high-frequency GPS data of soaring birds in flight.The flight patterns of soaring birds are strongly influenced by the interactions between atmospheric boundary layer processes and the morphology of the bird; climb rates depend on vertical air motion, flight altitude depends on boundary layer height, and drift off the bird’s flight path depends on wind speed and direction. We combine aerodynamic theory of soaring bird flight, the bird’s morphological properties, and three-dimensional GPS measurements at 3-s intervals to estimate the convective velocity scale ...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Tree level hydrodynamic approach for resolving aboveground water storage and stomatal conductance and modeling the effects of tree hydraulic strategy

Golnazalsadat Mirfenderesgi; Gil Bohrer; Ashley M. Matheny; Simone Fatichi; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Karina V. R. Schäfer

The finite difference ecosystem-scale tree crown hydrodynamics model version 2 (FETCH2) is a tree-scale hydrodynamic model of transpiration. The FETCH2 model employs a finite difference numerical methodology and a simplified single-beam conduit system to explicitly resolve xylem water potentials throughout the vertical extent of a tree. Empirical equations relate water potential within the stem to stomatal conductance of the leaves at each height throughout the crown. While highly simplified, this approach brings additional realism to the simulation of transpiration by linking stomatal responses to stem water potential rather than directly to soil moisture, as is currently the case in the majority of land surface models. FETCH2 accounts for plant hydraulic traits, such as the degree of anisohydric/isohydric response of stomata, maximal xylem conductivity, vertical distribution of leaf area, and maximal and minimal xylem water content. We used FETCH2 along with sap flow and eddy covariance data sets collected from a mixed plot of two genera (oak/pine) in Silas Little Experimental Forest, NJ, USA, to conduct an analysis of the intergeneric variation of hydraulic strategies and their effects on diurnal and seasonal transpiration dynamics. We define these strategies through the parameters that describe the genus level transpiration and xylem conductivity responses to changes in stem water potential. Our evaluation revealed that FETCH2 considerably improved the simulation of ecosystem transpiration and latent heat flux in comparison to more conventional models. A virtual experiment showed that the model was able to capture the effect of hydraulic strategies such as isohydric/anisohydric behavior on stomatal conductance under different soil-water availability conditions.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Automated River Reach Definition Strategies: Applications for the Surface Water and Ocean Topography Mission

Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Rui Wei; Michael Durand; J. Toby Minear; Alessio Domeneghetti; Guy Schumann; Brent A. Williams; Ernesto Rodriguez; Christophe Picamilh; Christine Lion; Tamlin M. Pavelsky; Pierre André Garambois

The upcoming Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission will measure water surface heights and widths for rivers wider than 100 m. At its native resolution, SWOT height errors are expected to be on the order of meters, which prevent the calculation of water surface slopes and the use of slope-dependent discharge equations. To mitigate height and width errors, the high-resolution measurements will be grouped into reaches (∼5 to 15 km), where slope and discharge are estimated. We describe three automated river segmentation strategies for defining optimum reaches for discharge estimation: (1) arbitrary lengths, (2) identification of hydraulic controls, and (3) sinuosity. We test our methodologies on 9 and 14 simulated SWOT overpasses over the Sacramento and the Po Rivers, respectively, which we compare against hydraulic models of each river. Our results show that generally, height, width, and slope errors decrease with increasing reach length. However, the hydraulic controls and the sinuosity methods led to better slopes and often height errors that were either smaller or comparable to those of arbitrary reaches of compatible sizes. Estimated discharge errors caused by the propagation of height, width, and slope errors through the discharge equation were often smaller for sinuosity (on average 8.5% for the Sacramento and 6.9% for the Po) and hydraulic control (Sacramento: 7.3% and Po: 5.9%) reaches than for arbitrary reaches of comparable lengths (Sacramento: 8.6% and Po: 7.8%). This analysis suggests that reach definition methods that preserve the hydraulic properties of the river network may lead to better discharge estimates.


PLOS ONE | 2013

FireStem2D--a two-dimensional heat transfer model for simulating tree stem injury in fires.

Efthalia K. Chatziefstratiou; Gil Bohrer; Anthony Bova; Ravishankar Subramanian; Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Amy Scherzer; Bret W. Butler; Matthew B. Dickinson

FireStem2D, a software tool for predicting tree stem heating and injury in forest fires, is a physically-based, two-dimensional model of stem thermodynamics that results from heating at the bark surface. It builds on an earlier one-dimensional model (FireStem) and provides improved capabilities for predicting fire-induced mortality and injury before a fire occurs by resolving stem moisture loss, temperatures through the stem, degree of bark charring, and necrotic depth around the stem. We present the results of numerical parameterization and model evaluation experiments for FireStem2D that simulate laboratory stem-heating experiments of 52 tree sections from 25 trees. We also conducted a set of virtual sensitivity analysis experiments to test the effects of unevenness of heating around the stem and with aboveground height using data from two studies: a low-intensity surface fire and a more intense crown fire. The model allows for improved understanding and prediction of the effects of wildland fire on injury and mortality of trees of different species and sizes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Modeling forest carbon cycle response to tree mortality: Effects of plant functional type and disturbance intensity

Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Gil Bohrer; David Medvigy; Ashley M. Matheny; Timothy H. Morin; Christoph S. Vogel; Christopher M. Gough; Kyle D. Maurer; Peter S. Curtis

Natural and anthropogenic disturbances influence ecological succession and impact the carbon cycle. Understanding disturbance effects and ecosystem recovery is essential to carbon modeling. We hypothesized that (1) species-specific disturbances impact the carbon cycle differently from nonspecific disturbances. In particular, disturbances that target early-successional species will lead to higher carbon uptake by the postrecovery, middle- and late-successional community and (2) disturbances that affect the midsuccessional deciduous species have more intense and long-lasting impacts on carbon uptake than disturbances of similar intensity that only affect the early-successional species. To test these hypotheses, we employed a series of simulations conducted with the Ecosystem Demography model version 2 to evaluate the sensitivity of a temperate mixed-deciduous forest to disturbance intensity and type. Our simulation scenarios included a control (undisturbed) case, a uniform disturbance case where we removed 30% of all trees regardless of their successional status, five cases where only early-successional deciduous trees were removed with increasing disturbance intensity (30%, 70%, 85%, and 100%), and four cases of midsuccessional disturbances with increasing intensity (70%, 85%, and 100%). Our results indicate that disturbances affecting the midsuccessional deciduous trees led to larger decreases in carbon uptake as well as longer recovery times when compared to disturbances that exclusively targeted the early-successional deciduous trees at comparable intensities. Moreover, disturbances affecting 30% to 100% of early-successional deciduous trees resulted in an increased carbon uptake, beginning 6 years after the disturbance and sustained through the end of the 100 year simulation.


2010 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, June 20 - June 23, 2010 | 2010

Modification of the rainfall characteristics by the maize canopy

Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Witold F. Krajewski

As rain falls on a canopy, it is redistributed and modified. While part of the rain will find a direct way through the canopy towards the ground, some will be redirected to the stem and then flow to the ground, some will accumulate on the leaves forming larger drops that will ultimately detach and fall and the remaining will eventually evaporate after the event is gone. This partitioning of rainfall into direct throughfall, stemflow and indirect throughfall modifies drop physical characteristics that are relevant to erosion studies, such as drop size and kinetic energy, while to stored water is relevant to remote sensing of soil moisture. With that in mind, we installed two modified tipping buckets to collect and measure the throughfall, two to measure the stemflow, one regular tipping bucket to measure the incoming rainfall, two compact weather stations to measure wind and to provide us with a redundant measurement of rainfall and two optical disdrometers, one underneath the canopy, one outside of the canopy, to measure the modification of the drop size distribution by the plants. The instruments were operational from 8 July 2009 until 30 September 2009, when we had the opportunity to record 17 events, from which 11 had accumulation of at least 10mm. We used the data to assess the partitioning of rainfall into stemflow and throughfall and to assess the modification of drop size distribution and kinetic energy caused by the plants.


7th World Congress on Computers in Agriculture Conference Proceedings, 22-24 June 2009, Reno, Nevada | 2009

Three-Dimensional Digital Model of Maize Canopy

Renato Prata de Moraes Frasson; Witold F. Krajewski

Current models of light interception and radiative transfer in crop canopies require three dimensional digital models of plants. Although the use of photogrammetry to create digital models of plants is not new, recent improvements in digital photography and the development of affordable commercial short range photogrammetry software have allowed us to reconstruct the three dimensional geometry of a maize canopy on the computer with unprecedented detail. Our non-destructive method allows the tracking of the development of an individual plant, a shortcoming of earlier methods. The methodology consists of placing several paper targets on the plant, photographing each leaf separately from several angles, and using the pictures to construct a digital model with the use of commercial photogrammetry software. To test this approach, we built two models of the same plant. The first model was constructed when the plant had six leaves, and the second was built a month later when it had ten leaves. In both cases, our main focus was to delineate the edges and mid-rib of the leaves, their orientation, and their inclination, which allows the calculations of parameters such as leaf area index, leaf overlap, and gap fraction, among others. The first model was built from 48 pictures and resulted in 348 points, and the second model used 119 pictures and resulted in 1553 points. By cloning this model and randomizing geometric parameters of the plant, a realistic digital model of a field can be created.

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Rui Wei

Ohio State University

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Tamlin M. Pavelsky

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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