Publications

Detailed Information

Canopy structure explains the relationship between photosynthesis and sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence in crops

Cited 189 time in Web of Science Cited 193 time in Scopus
Authors

Dechant, Benjamin; Ryu, Youngryel; Badgley, Grayson; Zeng, Yelu; Berry, Joseph A.; Zhang, Yongguang; Goulas, Yves; Li, Zhaohui; Zhang, Qian; Kang, Minseok; Li, Ji; Moya, Ismael

Issue Date
2020-05
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol.241, p. 111733
Abstract
Remote sensing of far-red sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) has emerged as an important tool for studying gross primary productivity (GPP) at the global scale. However, the relationship between SIF and GPP at the canopy scale lacks a clear mechanistic explanation. This is largely due to the poorly characterized role of the relative contributions from canopy structure and leaf physiology to the variability of the top-of-canopy, observed SIF signal. In particular, the effect of the canopy structure beyond light absorption is that only a fraction (f(esc)) of the SIF emitted from all leaves in the canopy can escape from the canopy due to the strong scattering of near-infrared radiation. We combined rice, wheat and corn canopy-level in-situ datasets to study how the physiological and structural components of SIF individually relate to measures of photosynthesis. At seasonal time scales, we found a considerably strong positive correlation (R-2 = 0.4-0.6) of fesc to the seasonal dynamics of the photosynthetic light use efficiency (LUEP), while the estimated physiological SIF yield was almost entirely uncorrelated to LUEP both at seasonal and diurnal time scales, with the partial exception of wheat. Consistent with these findings, the canopy structure and radiation component of SIF, defined as the product of APAR and f(esc), explained the relationship of observed SIF to GPP and even outperformed GPP estimation based on observed SIF at two of the three sites investigated. These results held for both half-hourly and daily mean values. In contrast, the total emitted SIF, obtained by normalizing observed SIF for f(esc), improved only the relationship to APAR but considerably decreased the correlation to GPP for all three crops. Our findings demonstrate the dominant role of canopy structure in the SIF-GPP relationship and establish a strong, mechanistic link between the near-infrared reflectance of vegetation (NIRV) and the relevant canopy structure information contained in the SIF signal. These insights are expected to be useful in improving remote sensing based GPP estimates.
ISSN
0034-4257
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/199166
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2020.111733
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Appears in Collections:

Related Researcher

  • College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
  • Department of Landscape Architecture and Rural System Engineering
Research Area

Altmetrics

Item View & Download Count

  • mendeley

Items in S-Space are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Share