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Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Collection 

Ver: 1.0
Status of Data: onGoing
Update Frequency: biannually
Security Classification: unclassified
Record Last Modified: 2026-04-01
Viewed 1123 times
Accessed 155 times
Dataset Created: 2010-09-03
Dataset Published: 2025-12-10
Data can be accessed from the following links:
HTTPPoint-of-truth metadata URLHTTPro-crate-metadata.jsonOPeNDAPCatalog for NetCDF files
How to cite this collection:
Griebel, A., Lieff, N. & Cleverly, J. (2025). Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Collection. Version 1.0. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network. Dataset. https://portal.tern.org.au/metadata/888ba337-c58f-4f8c-9438-7c4356e947df 
This dataset consists of measurements of the exchange of energy and mass between the surface and the atmospheric boundary-layer at Pine Hill cattle station in the Northern Territory using eddy covariance techniques.

The Alice Springs Mulga flux station is located on Pine Hill cattle station, approx. 170 km north of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory. The woodland is characterised by a mixed Acacia aneura and Acacia aptaneura canopy, with a total standing biomass of 32.5 t/ha and median canopy height of 4.3 m (tallest trees reach 8.9 m height). Elevation of the site is 602 m above sea level, and the terrain is flat. Mean annual precipitation at the nearby (45 km distant) Bureau of Meteorology station is 311 mm - 140 mm (1986-2025), but has ranged between 33 mm in the hydrological years of 2018/2019 to 712 mm in 2016/2017 since the tower is operational. Predominant wind directions are from the southeast and east. The extent of the woodland is 11 km to the east of the flux station and 16 km to the south. The soil is characterised as a red kandosol (74:11:15 sand:silt:clay) overlying an approx. 50 m deep water table. Pine Hill Station is a functioning cattle station that has been in operation for longer than 50 years. Fluxes of heat, water vapour and carbon are measured using the open-path eddy covariance technique at 11.6 m. Supplementary measurements above the canopy include temperature and humidity (11.6 m), downwelling and upwelling shortwave and longwave radiation (12.2 m). Precipitation is monitored in a canopy gap near the tower (2 m). Supplementary measurements below the canopy include barometric pressure (1 m) and temperature and humidity (2 m). Below ground soil measurements are made in bare soil, mulga, and understory habitats and include ground heat flux (0.08 m), soil temperature (0.02 m – 0.06 m) and soil moisture (0 – 0.1 m, 0.1 – 0.3 m, 0.6 – 0.8 m and 1.0 – 1.2 m).

For additional site information, see https://www.tern.org.au/tern-observatory/tern-ecosystem-processes/alice-mulga-supersite/

This data is also available at http://data.ozflux.org.au. 
Credit
We at TERN acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians throughout Australia, New Zealand and all nations. We honour their profound connections to land, water, biodiversity and culture and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and emerging. The Alice Springs Mulga flux station is managed by the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) and is funded by the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN), an Australian Government National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS) project. The site was managed by UTS from 2012-2019, James Cook University from 2019-2023, and UTS from 2024 onwards. We acknowledge contributions from Jamie Cleverly, Ralph Faux and Derek Eamus, who established and managed the site prior to 2024. 
Purpose
The purpose of the Alice Springs Mulga flux station is to:
  • Measure the exchange of carbon dioxide, water vapour and energy between a semi-arid mulga (Acacia sp.) ecosystem and the atmosphere
  • Study hydrological and ecophysiological responses to rainfall variability and heat stress
  • Determine the evapotranspirative cost of carbon uptake
  • Study the partitioning of ecosystem metabolism between the mulga canopy, a seasonal mixed understory (C3 and C4, grass and shrub) and soil components
  • Utilise the observations for parameterising and validating remote sensing data and land-surface models over semi-arid ecosystems.
 
Lineage
All flux raw data is subject to the quality control process OzFlux QA/QC to generate data from L1 to L6. Levels 3 to 6 are available for re-use. Datasets contain Quality Controls flags which will indicate when data quality is poor and has been filled from alternative sources. For more details, refer to Isaac et al. (2017) in the Publications section, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-2903-2017. 
Method DocumentationData not provided.
Procedure StepsData not provided.
Spatial Description
Pine Hill cattle station, near Alice Springs in the Northern Territory. 
Temporal Coverage
From 2010-09-03 to on going 
Spatial Resolution

Data not provided.

Vertical Extent

Data not provided.

Data Quality Assessment Scope
If the data quality is poor, the data is filled from alternative sources. Filled data can be identified by the Quality Controls flags in the dataset. Quality control checks include (i) range checks for plausible limits, (ii) spike detection, (iii) dependency on other variables and (iv) manual rejection of date ranges of known instrument failures. Specific checks applied to the sonic and IRGA data include rejection of points based on the sonic and IRGA diagnostic values and on either automatic gain control (AGC) or CO2 and H2O signal strength, depending upon the configuration of the IRGA. For more details, refer to Isaac et al. (2017) in the Publications section, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-2903-2017.
For further information about the software (PyFluxPro) used to process and quality control the flux data, see https://github.com/OzFlux/PyFluxPro/wiki. 
Data Quality Report
Data not provided. 
Data Quality Assessment Outcome
Data not provided. 
ANZSRC - FOR
Atmospheric sciences
Climate change impacts and adaptation
Ecosystem function
Environmental management
Soil sciences
GCMD Sciences
AGRICULTURE - SOIL MOISTURE/WATER CONTENT
ATMOSPHERE - AIR TEMPERATURE
ATMOSPHERE - ATMOSPHERIC CARBON DIOXIDE
ATMOSPHERE - ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE MEASUREMENTS
ATMOSPHERE - EVAPOTRANSPIRATION
ATMOSPHERE - HEAT FLUX
ATMOSPHERE - HUMIDITY
ATMOSPHERE - INCOMING SOLAR RADIATION
ATMOSPHERE - LONGWAVE RADIATION
ATMOSPHERE - PRECIPITATION AMOUNT
ATMOSPHERE - SHORTWAVE RADIATION
ATMOSPHERE - TRACE GASES/TRACE SPECIES
ATMOSPHERE - TURBULENCE
ATMOSPHERE - WIND DIRECTION
ATMOSPHERE - WIND SPEED
BIOSPHERE - PHOTOSYNTHETICALLY ACTIVE RADIATION
BIOSPHERE - TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
LAND SURFACE - LAND PRODUCTIVITY
LAND SURFACE - SOIL TEMPERATURE
SOLID EARTH - BIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
Horizontal Resolution
Point Resolution
Instruments
Kipp&Zonen CNR1
Kipp&Zonen CNR4
Parameters
air temperature
downward heat flux at ground level in soil
eastward wind
ecosystem respiration
gross primary productivity of biomass expressed as carbon
magnitude of surface downward stress
mass concentration of carbon dioxide in air
mass concentration of water vapor in air
mole fraction of water vapor in air
Monin-Obukhov length
net ecosystem exchange
net ecosystem productivity
northward wind
relative humidity
soil moisture content
soil temperature
specific humidity
specific humidity saturation deficit in air
surface air pressure
surface downwelling longwave flux in air
surface downwelling shortwave flux in air
surface friction velocity
surface net downward radiative flux
surface upward flux of available energy
surface upward latent heat flux
surface upward mass flux of carbon dioxide expressed as carbon due to emission from natural sources
surface upward mole flux of carbon dioxide
surface upward sensible heat flux
surface upwelling longwave flux in air
surface upwelling shortwave flux in air
thickness of rainfall amount
upward mole flux of carbon dioxide due inferred from storage
vertical wind
water evapotranspiration flux
water vapor partial pressure in air
water vapor saturation deficit in air
wind from direction
wind speed
Platforms
Alice Springs Mulga Flux Station
Temporal Resolution
1 minute - < 1 hour
Topic
climatologyMeteorologyAtmosphere
User Defined
AU-ASM
Mulga woodlands
Author
Griebel, Anne
Co-Author
Lieff, Nicola
Cleverly, Jamie
Contributor
Eamus, Derek
Grant, Nicole M
Faux, Ralph
Li, Zheng
Contact Point
Griebel, Anne
Publisher
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network
Cleverly, J, N Boulain, R Villalobos-Vega, N Grant, R Faux, C Wood, PG Cook, Q Yu, A Leigh, and D Eamus, 2013. Dynamics of component carbon fluxes in a semi-arid Acacia woodland, central Australia. J. Geophys. Res.-Biogeosci., 118, 1168–1185.
Eamus, D, J Cleverly, N Boulain, N Grant, R Faux, and R Villalobos-Vega, 2013. Carbon and water fluxes in an arid-zone Acacia savanna woodland: An analyses of seasonal patterns and responses to rainfall events. Agric. For. Meteor., 182–183, 225–238.
Beringer, Jason et al., 2016. An introduction to the Australian and New Zealand flux tower network – OzFlux. Biogeosciences, 13(21). doi:10.5194/bg-13-5895-2016
Isaac, Peter et al., 2017. OzFlux data: network integration from collection to curation. Biogeosciences, 14(12). doi:10.5194/bg-14-2903-2017
Alice Springs Mulga SuperSite​
Tarin, T., Nolan, R. H., Eamus, D., & Cleverly, J. (2020). Carbon and water fluxes in two adjacent Australian semi-arid ecosystems. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 281, Article 107853.
By Child records
Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2022_v1Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2022_v2Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2023_v1Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2023_v2Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2024_v1Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2024_v2Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2025_v1Alice Springs Mulga Flux Data Release 2025_v2
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Please advise any work or publications that use this data via the online form at https://www.tern.org.au/research-publications/#reporting 

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