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Sun-induced fluorescence - a new probe of photosynthesis: First maps from the imaging spectrometer HyPlant

Authors :
Jose Moreno
Uwe Rascher
Micol Rossini
Thorsten Kraska
Dirk Schüttemeyer
Andreas Burkart
Matthias Drusch
Luis Alonso
Ralf Pude
Cinzia Panigada
Miroslav Pikl
C Cilia
Kari Kataja
Francisco de Assis de Carvalho Pinto
Roberto Colombo
Alexander Damm
Luis Guanter
Onno Muller
Ulrich Schurr
Anke Schickling
Jan Hanuš
Timo Hyvärinen
Sergio Cogliati
Tommaso Julitta
Panagiotis Kokkalis
S. Kraft
Lukas Prey
Jochem Verrelst
František Zemek
M. Matveeva
Jouni Jussila
Rascher, U
Alonso, L
Burkart, A
Cilia, C
Cogliati, S
Colombo, R
Damm, A
Drusch, M
Guanter, L
Hanus, J
Hyvärinen, T
Julitta, T
Jussila, J
Kataja, K
Kokkalis, P
Kraft, S
Kraska, T
Matveeva, M
Moreno, J
Muller, O
Panigada, C
Pikl, M
Pinto, F
Prey, L
Pude, R
Rossini, M
Schickling, A
Schurr, U
Schüttemeyer, D
Verrelst, J
Zemek, F
University of Zurich
Rascher, Uwe
Source :
Global Change Biology
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Variations in photosynthesis still cause substantial uncertainties in predicting photosynthetic CO2 uptake rates and monitoring plant stress. Changes in actual photosynthesis that are not related to greenness of vegetation are difficult to measure by reflectance based optical remote sensing techniques. Several activities are underway to evaluate the sun-induced fluorescence signal on the ground and on a coarse spatial scale using space-borne imaging spectrometers. Intermediate-scale observations using airborne-based imaging spectroscopy, which are critical to bridge the existing gap between small-scale field studies and global observations, are still insufficient. Here we present the first validated maps of sun-induced fluorescence in that critical, intermediate spatial resolution, employing the novel airborne imaging spectrometer HyPlant. HyPlant has an unprecedented spectral resolution, which allows for the first time quantifying sun-induced fluorescence fluxes in physical units according to the Fraunhofer Line Depth Principle that exploits solar and atmospheric absorption bands. Maps of sun-induced fluorescence show a large spatial variability between different vegetation types, which complement classical remote sensing approaches. Different crop types largely differ in emitting fluorescence that additionally changes within the seasonal cycle and thus may be related to the seasonal activation and deactivation of the photosynthetic machinery. We argue that sun-induced fluorescence emission is related to two processes: (i) the total absorbed radiation by photosynthetically active chlorophyll; and (ii) the functional status of actual photosynthesis and vegetation stress.

Details

ISSN :
13652486
Volume :
21
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global change biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18bdcd9186c6ee8fd8aa9164b6a26b66