Skip to main content
NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Main navigation

  • About Us
    • Overview
      • Spatial and Temporal Design
      • History
    • Vision and Management
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups (TWGs)
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
      • Contact NEON Biorepository
      • Field Offices
    • User Accounts
    • Staff
    • Code of Conduct

    About Us

  • Data & Samples
    • Data Portal
      • Explore Data Products
      • Data Availability Charts
      • Spatial Data & Maps
      • Document Library
      • API & GraphQL
      • Prototype Data
      • External Lab Data Ingest (restricted)
    • Data Themes
      • Biogeochemistry
      • Ecohydrology
      • Land Cover and Processes
      • Organisms, Populations, and Communities
    • Samples & Specimens
      • Discover and Use NEON Samples
        • Sample Types
        • Sample Repositories
        • Sample Explorer
        • Megapit and Distributed Initial Characterization Soil Archives
      • Sample Processing
      • Sample Quality
      • Taxonomic Lists
    • Collection Methods
      • Protocols & Standardized Methods
      • Airborne Remote Sensing
        • Flight Box Design
        • Flight Schedules and Coverage
        • Daily Flight Reports
          • AOP Flight Report Sign Up
        • Camera
        • Imaging Spectrometer
        • Lidar
      • Automated Instruments
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sensor Collection Frequency
        • Instrumented Collection Types
          • Meteorology
          • Phenocams
          • Soil Sensors
          • Ground Water
          • Surface Water
      • Observational Sampling
        • Site Level Sampling Design
        • Sampling Schedules
        • Observation Types
          • Aquatic Organisms
            • Aquatic Microbes
            • Fish
            • Macroinvertebrates & Zooplankton
            • Periphyton, Phytoplankton, and Aquatic Plants
          • Terrestrial Organisms
            • Birds
            • Ground Beetles
            • Mosquitoes
            • Small Mammals
            • Soil Microbes
            • Terrestrial Plants
            • Ticks
          • Hydrology & Geomorphology
            • Discharge
            • Geomorphology
          • Biogeochemistry
          • DNA Sequences
          • Pathogens
          • Sediments
          • Soils
            • Soil Descriptions
        • Optimizing the Observational Sampling Designs
    • Data Notifications
    • Data Guidelines and Policies
      • Acknowledging and Citing NEON
      • Publishing Research Outputs
      • Usage Policies
    • Data Management
      • Data Availability
      • Data Formats and Conventions
      • Data Processing
      • Data Quality
      • Data Product Bundles
      • Data Product Revisions and Releases
        • Release 2021
        • Release 2022
        • Release 2023
        • Release 2024
        • Release-2025
      • NEON and Google
      • Externally Hosted Data

    Data & Samples

  • Field Sites
    • About Field Sites and Domains
    • Explore Field Sites
    • Site Management Data Product

    Field Sites

  • Impact
    • Observatory Blog
    • Case Studies
    • Papers & Publications
    • Newsroom
      • NEON in the News
      • Newsletter Archive
      • Newsletter Sign Up

    Impact

  • Resources
    • Getting Started with NEON Data & Resources
    • Documents and Communication Resources
      • Papers & Publications
      • Document Library
      • Outreach Materials
    • Code Hub
      • Code Resources Guidelines
      • Code Resources Submission
      • NEON's GitHub Organization Homepage
    • Learning Hub
      • Science Videos
      • Tutorials
      • Workshops & Courses
      • Teaching Modules
    • Research Support Services
      • Field Site Coordination
      • Letters of Support
      • Mobile Deployment Platforms
      • Permits and Permissions
      • AOP Flight Campaigns
      • Research Support FAQs
      • Research Support Projects
    • Funding Opportunities

    Resources

  • Get Involved
    • Advisory Groups
      • Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee
      • Technical Working Groups
    • Upcoming Events
    • NEON Ambassador Program
      • Exploring NEON-Derived Data Products Workshop Series
    • Research and Collaborations
      • Environmental Data Science Innovation and Inclusion Lab
      • Collaboration with DOE BER User Facilities and Programs
      • EFI-NEON Ecological Forecasting Challenge
      • NEON Great Lakes User Group
      • NEON Science Summit
      • NCAR-NEON-Community Collaborations
        • NCAR-NEON Community Steering Committee
    • Community Engagement
      • How Community Feedback Impacts NEON Operations
    • Science Seminars and Data Skills Webinars
      • Past Years
    • Work Opportunities
      • Careers
      • Seasonal Fieldwork
      • Internships
        • Intern Alumni
    • Partners

    Get Involved

  • My Account
  • Search

Search

Impact

  • Observatory Blog
  • Case Studies
  • Papers & Publications
  • Newsroom

Breadcrumb

  1. Impact
  2. Observatory Blog
  3. AmeriFlux and the NEON Program Join Forces for Eddy Covariance Data

AmeriFlux and the NEON Program Join Forces for Eddy Covariance Data

June 24, 2020

The tower at BONA

Want to watch the planet breathe? Eddy covariance data from the NEON flux towers allow you to do just that. These data measure the exchange of gases, water, and energy between ecosystems and the atmosphere.

The NEON program has now made data from its 47 flux towers available through the AmeriFlux data portal. This will allow researchers to synthesize data from the NEON flux towers with data from other towers across the AmeriFlux network. The data integration (described in a recent white paper) will also enable derivation of higher-level data products that are not currently available through the NEON Data Portal.

What is Eddy Covariance?

Simply put, eddy covariance is a technique for measuring the movement of energy and matter between the Earth’s surface and the atmosphere. Water, carbon dioxide, oxygen, nutrients, and energy are continually cycling through the ecosystem by the activities of plants, animals, and microbes and natural processes such as precipitation, wind, and radiation from the sun.

A flux tower has instruments that measure gas and energy exchanges (fluxes) at different levels of the vegetation canopy. These instruments take measurements up to 20 times per second to directly measure gas and water concentrations, wind speed and direction, temperature, radiation levels, and other variables. Tiny changes in these quantities as the air moves (eddies) allow researchers to estimate how energy, water, and gases are moving into and out of the ecosystem. 

Eddy covariance data allow us to examine important ecological questions such as: What is the net exchange of greenhouse gases between an ecosystem and the atmosphere? How do changes in the structure and composition of an ecosystem impact its ability to sequester carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases? How do meteorological conditions affect the exchange of energy, water, and gases? How do these exchanges vary across ecosystem types and geographic regions?

Answering these questions will allow ecologists to better understand ecosystem processes and functions. Eddy covariance data help researchers build better models of climate change and ecosystem function that can be used to inform public policy and make better land management decisions.

Margaret Torn, an ecologist and biogeochemist at Berkeley Lab and University of California and the lead Principal Investigator for the AmeriFlux Management Project, explains, “Carbon exchange is a key indicator of many of the ecosystem services that people care about most—things like food production, timber growth, bioenergy production, clean air and water, and soil carbon sequestration. Understanding how gases and energy are exchanged gives us really powerful insights into the function of an ecosystem, which is important both for its own sake and for all of the ecosystem services we depend on.”

 

The tower at OSBS

The tower at OSBS

 

Integrating Eddy Covariance Data Across Networks

AmeriFlux has been collecting and coordinating eddy covariance data across the Americas since 1996. The network provides a common platform for data sharing and collaboration for organizations and individual private investigators collecting flux tower data. There are now 470 registered flux tower sites in North, Central, and South America in the AmeriFlux network, many operated by individual researchers or universities. The towers collect eddy covariance data across a broad range of climate zones and ecosystem types, from Chile to Alaska and everywhere in between.

Now, data from the NEON project will be available through the AmeriFlux data portal. The NEON team has formatted data from the NEON flux towers to make it fully compatible with AmeriFlux data. This will allow researchers to view, download and analyze data from the NEON flux towers alongside data from all of the other flux towers in the AmeriFlux network.

With 47 flux towers at terrestrial field sites across the U.S., the NEON program is now the largest single contributor of flux tower data to the AmeriFlux network. NEON field sites are located in 20 ecoclimatic zones across the U.S., representing many distinct ecosystems. Eddy covariance data will be collected using the same methods at each site for the entire 30-year life of the Observatory, allowing for unprecedented comparability across both time and space.

Cove Sturtevant, a Research Scientist at the NEON program specializing in quality control of instrument data, says, “While data collection methods at most AmeriFlux sites are driven by the research questions of individual investigators, NEON is a community resource designed to answer very broad research questions. We have a wide range of instrumentation and take the same measurements in the same way across all sites.”

Margaret adds, “NEON is really important to us. Not only are they the largest operator of flux towers within the AmeriFlux network, their towers have the largest and richest sets of additional ecological data and metadata. They are set up to enable exploration of all kinds of ecological questions, not just carbon exchange. So with NEON, we have a rich set of observations of other aspects of the ecosystem such as plant diversity and structure, soil microbial diversity and abundance, and soil chemistry along with additional meteorological measurements. This expands the scope of research questions researchers can ask with the data.”

The Power of Networked Ecology

Over the last few years, the NEON and AmeriFlux teams have developed strong collaborative ties that include sharing expertise and technical know-how through workshops, forums, and relationships between individual investigators. NEON staff have been active participants in AmeriFlux annual meetings and technical workshops since 2016. Steven Metzger, the Science Lead for the NEON Surface-Atmosphere Exchange Team, is a member of the AmeriFlux Science Steering Committee. Several AmeriFlux leaders and site PIs have participated in the NEON Technical Working Groups and Science, Technology & Education Advisory Committee (STEAC), providing scientific guidance and technical direction for NEON’s flux tower measurement program.

 

The tower at BONA

The tower at BONA

The partnership between the NEON program and AmeriFlux brings substantial benefits to both organizations and to the scientific community as a whole. For AmeriFlux, the NEON program promises data continuity from a core set of sites representing the major ecosystems across the U.S. Cove says, “Most of the AmeriFlux sites have much shorter funding cycles than the NEON program, which can lead to data gaps when individual projects come to an end. NEON is a 30-year program, which will provide a stable source of ecological measurements for all 47 sites for the life of the program.”

NEON benefits from the collaboration as well. NEON data are now fully compatible and comparable with data from the other 400+ flux towers in the network, allowing researchers to compare NEON and non-NEON sites and fill in data gaps. While the NEON program is still in its operational infancy, many of the AmeriFlux towers have data going back years or decades that can supplement the NEON data streams. Integrating with AmeriFlux will also enable derivation of additional higher-level data products which were part of the original NEON program plan but were later decommissioned. For example, while NEON only provides a calculation of net gas exchange, the AmeriFlux data tools will allow calculation of the gross inputs and outputs of carbon and other gases.

Both teams look forward to continuing the collaboration over the coming decades. Margaret says, “We have all benefited from the relationship. At the moment, NEON is a newbie in the network, but they will be in operation for a long time. That stability is really important. And they have expert dedicated staff that are really great to work with. This is a collaboration that will only get more valuable with time.”

Share

Related Posts:

New code release: neonutilities package available in Python

September 24, 2024

NEON Data Release 2025 is available

January 29, 2025

Precipitation (DP1.00006.001) to be split into three Data Products

December 27, 2024

NSF NEON, Operated by Battelle

Follow Us:

Join Our Newsletter

Get updates on events, opportunities, and how NEON is being used today.

Subscribe Now

Footer

  • About Us
  • Newsroom
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Careers
  • Code of Conduct

Copyright © Battelle, 2025

The National Ecological Observatory Network is a major facility fully funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.