4.7 Article

Diffuse solar radiation and canopy photosynthesis in a changing environment

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 311, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2021.108684

Keywords

Diffuse radiation; Aerosols; Clouds; Climate change; Spectral composition; Photosynthesis

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [324555]
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/R004633/1, BB/G003157/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The amount of sunlight received by plants is influenced by cloudiness and pollution. Changes in cloud cover and aerosol concentrations will impact photosynthesis and terrestrial ecosystem productivity. Research has shown that clouds and aerosols can alter the spectral composition of incoming solar radiation, thus affecting the process of photosynthesis in plants.
The sunlight received by plants is affected by cloudiness and pollution. Future changes in cloud cover will differ among regions, while aerosol concentrations are expected to continue increasing globally as a result of wildfires, fossil fuel combustion, and industrial pollution. Clouds and aerosols increase the diffuse fraction and modify the spectral composition of incident solar radiation, and both will affect photosynthesis and terrestrial ecosystem productivity. Thus, an assessment of how canopy and leaf-level processes respond to these changes is needed as part of accurately forecasting future global carbon assimilation. To review these processes and their implications: first, we discuss the physical basis of the effect of clouds and aerosols on solar radiation as it penetrates the atmosphere; second, we consider how direct and diffuse radiation are absorbed and transmitted by plant canopies and their leaves; and finally, we assess the consequences for photosynthesis at the canopy and ecosystem levels. Photobiology will be affected at the atmospheric level by a shift in spectral composition toward shorter or longer wavelengths under clouds or aerosols, respectively, due to different scattering. Changes in the microclimate and spectral composition of radiation due to an enhanced diffuse fraction also depend on the acclimation of canopy architectural and physiological traits, such as leaf area index, orientation, and clumping. Together with an enhancement of light-use efficiency, this makes the effect of diffuse solar radiation on canopy photosynthesis a multilayered phenomenon, requiring experimental testing to capture those complex interactions that will determine whether it produces the persistent enhancement in carbon assimilation that land-surface models currently predict.

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