Remote Sensing of Solar-excited Plant Fluorescence as a Measure of Photosynthetic Rate |
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Authors: | Freedman A. Cavender-Bares J. Kebabian P.L. Bhaskar R. Scott H. Bazzaz F.A. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Center for Materials, Technology, Aerodyne Research, Inc., 45 Manning Road, Billerica, MA 01821-3976, USA;(2) Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA |
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Abstract: | Leaf level net photosynthetic rates (PN) of laurel oak (Quercus hemispherica) juveniles grown under contrasting nutrient and CO2 regimes were negatively correlated with red to far-red ratios, R/FR (690/760 nm), steady-state, solar-excited fluorescence ratios (r2 = 0.66, n = 12) measured across 12 plant canopies. Laurel oak juveniles that had been subjected to nitrogen stress over a period of a year demonstrated higher R/FR than their counterparts that had been provided with sufficient nitrogen. Plants that had been grown at elevated CO2 concentrations, EC [700 mol (CO2) mol-1] also exhibited significantly higher R/FR when subjected to normal ambient carbon dioxide concentrations than their counterparts grown under ambient concentrations, AC [380 mol (CO2) mol-1]. All fluorescence measurements were obtained by observing a multi-plant canopy using a unique solar-blind passive sensor. This sensor, which utilizes Fraunhofer-line discrimination techniques, detects radiation at the cores of the lines comprising the atmospheric oxygen A- and B-bands, centered at 762 and 688 nm, respectively. These results support the use of solar-excited steady-state plant fluorescence as a potential tool for remote measurement of canopy radiation use efficiency. |
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Keywords: | chlorophyll CO2 concentration laurel oak nitrogen Quercus photon use efficiency R/FR ratio |
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