Preliminary Meteorological Measurement Standards - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Preliminary Meteorological Measurement Standards

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Statement of standards before site selection (TIE 1979) Selected sites assume obligations To collect data To characterize the ecosystem To make data available – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preliminary Meteorological Measurement Standards


1
Preliminary Meteorological Measurement Standards
  • Statement of standards before site selection (TIE
    1979)
  • Selected sites assume obligations
  • To collect data
  • To characterize the ecosystem
  • To make data available
  • Original Meteorological Committee
  • Dr. Harvey L. Ragsdale and Dr. Lloyd W. Swift of
    the Coweeta LTER site were co-chairs
  • Swift and Ragsdale, 1985

2
Original LTER Meteorological Standards
  • Standards (Swift and Ragsdale 1985)
  • Original LTER planning document (TIE 1979)
  • Site-specific material (Waring et al. 1978)
  • National Weather Service (USDC 1970)
  • World Meteorological Organization documentation
    (WMO 1970, 1971)
  • LTER scientist experience

3
Climate Committee Established 1986Objectives
  • Establish baseline meteorological measurements
  • Characterize each LTER site
  • Enable intersite comparisons
  • Document both cyclic and long-term changes
  • Provide a detailed climatic history
  • Correlate with bioecological phenomena
  • Provide data for modeling
  • provide a basis for coordinating specialized or
    short term meteorological measurements

4
Standards Document 1986
  • Standardized measurements (4 levels)
  • Not a single inclusive set
  • Established degrees of uniformity
  • Flexible for site specific requirements
  • Instrumentation, frequency, reporting guidelines
  • Site selection guidelines
  • Retention of original records required
  • Statement of accuracy and precision levels

5
Standardized Measurements (4 Levels)
  • Level 0 entry level only (1 year)
  • Daily temp and precipitation (all LTER sites)
  • Level 1 basic climatic station
  • Continuous temperature, precipitation, humidity,
    wind
  • (all LTER sites will achieve)
  • Level 2 research meteorological station
  • More intensive, more parameters, continuous (most
    LTER sites)
  • Level 3 specialized measurements
  • Coordinate plans to develop standardized
    techniques
  • Facilitate potential intersite comparisons

6
Intersite Exchange of Data (1986)
  • Each site must make one stations data available
  • Specific single site study data may be
    proprietary
  • Sharing of data will not be automatic
  • Individual requests will be necessary
  • If future intersite study is anticipated
  • Plan for identical instrumentation and methods
  • Pay special attention to reporting accuracy and
    precision
  • Seek advice from climate committee

7
http//sql.lternet.edu/climdb/climdb.html
8
LTER Information Manager Activities
  • Network Information System (NIS)
  • All-site bibliography
  • All-site personnel directory
  • Distributed Table of Contents (DTOC)
  • Site Description Database (SiteDB)
  • Climate Database Project (ClimDB)

9
NIS Research Module Strategy
  • Enable cross-site data integration
  • Centralize access to cross-site data
  • Local site maintains control of data
  • Modular design
  • Prototype development

10
ClimDB Centributed Mechanics (Baker et al. 2000)
Individual Site
Central Site
Public User
Monthly Data (V-One,V-Many)
CGI Script
Dynamic URL
Relational Database
Site Database
Daily Data
CGI Script
Harvester
Static URL
Graphics
Local Script
Exchange filters
Exchange format
Report formats
Distribution filters
11
ClimDB Project Objectives
  • For all LTER sites
  • Provide current climatic data summaries
  • Provide comparable climatic data summaries
  • Fulfill the needs of LTER intersite and synthesis
    efforts
  • Demonstrate centributed database approach

12
ClimDB Background
  • LTER Climate Committee (Greenland 1986)
  • Standardized baseline meteorological measurements
  • CLIMDES (Greenland et al. 1996)
  • LTER site monthly summaries (1961-1990)
  • XROOTS Climate Workshop (Bledsoe et al. 1996)
  • Report formats (V-one, V-many)
  • LTER Information Management Committee Meeting
    (1996)
  • Centributed database, exchange format, harvest
    mechanism
  • CLIMSTAN Workshop (Greenland et al. 1997)
  • Exchange format refinement, Metadata standard
    development

13
Communication of the Research Scientist with the
Information Manager is important!
14
Identifying End-User Needs
  • XROOTS Climate Workshop
  • Identification of distribution report formats
  • Separation of internal data management storage
    structures from exchange and report formats
  • CLIMSTAN Workshop
  • Blend of Science and Information Management
  • Participants included Climatologists, Information
    Managers, Data Users/Modelers, and a Field
    Technician

15
CLIMSTAN Workshop Accomplishments
  • New LTER standard climate methods documentation
  • Defines levels of site participation (0-4)
  • Database guidelines documentation
  • Exchange format
  • Quality assurance (local and network guidelines)
  • Participation instructions
  • Naming conventions (time resolution, parameter,
    aggregation, units)
  • Metadata requirements and schema
  • Data distribution through a web interface
  • Report format refinement
  • Graphical format refinement

16
Metadata Serves Important Roles
I never metadata I didnt like
Data Interpretation
Data Discovery
Data Integration
Metadata R Us
17
LTER NETWORK METEOROLOGICAL METADATA SCHEMA
MEASUREMENT_LEVEL
STATION_LEVEL
LTER_SITE_LEVEL
LTER_CODE STATION_CODE LATITUDE LONGITUDE STATION
_DESCRIPTION TOPOGRAPHY ELEVATION SURFACE_TYPE EX
POSURE WIND_EXPOSURE STATION_START STATION_HISTORY
STATION_PHOTO
18
NIS Research Module Issues / Lessons Learned
  • Science must drive development
  • Site participation necessary provide incentives
  • Metadata capture and integration with data
  • Host site commitment of resources and time
  • Long-term maintenance and continual updates
  • Proprietary rights provide data use agreement

19
Data Use Agreement
  • Assures data provider of ethical use of data
  • Provides citation for data source
  • Gives protection through disclaimer
  • Requires notification of data usage
  • Requests copies of derivative publications
  • Encourages good scientific citizenship

20
Successful Intersite Collaboration(Webster 2000)
  • Collegiality, trust, respect
  • Site visits method, procedure coordination
  • Incentives for participation
  • Publications
  • Monetary support
  • Baseline of data and prior research
  • Time and patience
  • Effective Leadership

21
Typical Intersite Study Information Management
  • Scientist serves as data manager
  • Complete metadata is not assembled
  • Long-term accessibility to the database is not
    planned
  • Future updates to the database are not possible

22
ClimDB Variable Names
23
Extension of ClimDB to Level 2 3
24
Monthly Distribution Formats
  • V-One
  • DVS 003 MATMPM
  • Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May
    Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov
    Dec
  • 1990 45.0 50.0 53.0 58.0 64.4
    70.9 74.5 73.4 70.6 63.2 53.0
    45.7
  • 1991 44.1 50.5 52.2 59.3 65.0
    70.2 73.4 72.4 71.3 64.1 53.8
    46.6
  • 1992 46.8 49.0 51.6 55.4 63.4
    72.3 76.7 75.4 69.6 62.3 52.2
    44.8
  • DVS 003 MPRECIP
  • Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May
    Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov
    Dec
  • 1990 4.20 2.58 1.80 1.30 0.37
    0.15 0.03 0.04 0.22 0.99 2.36
    3.28
  • V-Many
  • DVS 003
  • Year Month MATMPM MATMPI
    MATMPX MPRECIP
  • 1990 Jan 45.0
    37.2 52.7
    4.20
  • 1990 Feb 50.0
    40.3 59.6
    2.58
  • 1990 Mar 53.0
    41.3 64.7
    1.80
  • 1990 Apr 58.0
    44.4 71.5 1.30
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