4.7 Article

Meta-analysis assessing potential of steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence for remote sensing detection of plant water, temperature and nitrogen stress

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages 420-436

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2015.07.022

Keywords

Steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence; Passive sun-induced fluorescence; Active laser-induced fluorescence; Photosynthesis; Stress; Water; Temperature; Nitrogen; Random-effects meta-analysis; FLEX satellite mission

Funding

  1. European Space Agency (ESA ESTEC) [4000106396/12/NL/AF]
  2. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of Czech Republic (NPU I) [LO1415]
  3. Discovery project of the Australian Research Council [DP140101488: Air-LIFT]

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Many laboratory studies investigating chlorophyll fluorescence (F) of plants have provided sufficient evidence of the functional link between dynamic changes in photosynthetic activity and F emissions. Far fewer studies, however, have been devoted to detailed analysis of F emission under steady-state conditions, which may be amenable to measurement by passive spectroradiometers onboard airborne or satellite missions. Here, we provide a random-effects meta-analysis of studies using both passively (sun-induced) and actively (e.g. laser-induced) measured steady-state F for detecting stress reactions in terrestrial vegetation. Specifically, we review behaviour of F in red and far-red wavelengths, and also the red to far-red F ratio, for plants physiologically stressed by water deficit, temperature extremes, and nitrogen insufficiency. Results suggest that water stress is, in general, associated with a decline in red and far-red F signal intensity measured at both leaf and canopy levels, whereas the red to far-red F ratio displays an inconsistent behaviour. Chilling, for which only studies with active measurements at the leaf level are available, significantly increased red and far-red F, whereas heat stress produced a less convincing decrease in both F emissions, notably in canopies measured passively. The clearest indicator of temperature stress was the F ratio, which declined significantly and consistently. The F ratio was also the strongest indicator of nitrogen deficiency, revealing a nearly uniformly increasing pattern driven by predominantly declining far-red F. Although significant knowledge gaps were encountered for certain scales and F measurement techniques, the analyses indicate that future airborne or space-borne acquisitions of both red and far-red F signals would be beneficial for timely detection of plant stress events. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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