A widely-used eddy covariance gap-filling method creates systematic bias in carbon balance estimates

Sci Rep. 2023 Jan 31;13(1):1720. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-28827-2.

Abstract

Climate change mitigation requires, besides reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, actions to increase carbon sinks in terrestrial ecosystems. A key measurement method for quantifying such sinks and calibrating models is the eddy covariance technique, but it requires imputation, or gap-filling, of missing data for determination of annual carbon balances of ecosystems. Previous comparisons of gap-filling methods have concluded that commonly used methods, such as marginal distribution sampling (MDS), do not have a significant impact on the carbon balance estimate. By analyzing an extensive, global data set, we show that MDS causes significant carbon balance errors for northern (latitude [Formula: see text]) sites. MDS systematically overestimates the carbon dioxide (CO[Formula: see text]) emissions of carbon sources and underestimates the CO[Formula: see text] sequestration of carbon sinks. We also reveal reasons for these biases and show how a machine learning method called extreme gradient boosting or a modified implementation of MDS can be used to substantially reduce the northern site bias.