4.5 Article

Diurnal and Seasonal Dynamics of Solar-Induced Chlorophyll Fluorescence, Vegetation Indices, and Gross Primary Productivity in the Boreal Forest

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JG006588

Keywords

boreal forest; solar induced fluorescence; SIF; biosphere remote sensing; GPP; vegetation indices

Funding

  1. NASA's Earth Science Division IDS (UCLA) program [80NSSC17K0108]
  2. NASA's Earth Science Division ABoVE program [80NSSC19M0130]
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  4. National Science Foundation [DGE-1650604, DGE-2034835]
  5. Macrosystems Biology and NEON-Enabled Science program at NSF [1926090]
  6. NASA
  7. Canadian Space Agency
  8. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  9. Global Institute for Water Security, University of Saskatchewan
  10. Northeastern States Research Cooperative, NSF's Macrosystems Biology program [EF-1065029, EF-1702697]
  11. DOE's Regional and Global Climate Modeling program [DE-SC0016011]
  12. US National Park Service Inventory and Monitoring Program
  13. USA National Phenology Network (United States Geological Survey) [G10AP00129]
  14. USA National Phenology Network
  15. North Central Climate Science Center (United States Geological Survey) [G16AC00224]
  16. NASA's Earth Science Division IDS (JPL) program [80NSSC17K0110]
  17. Division Of Environmental Biology
  18. Direct For Biological Sciences [1926090] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Remote sensing of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) is a powerful proxy for gross primary productivity (GPP) in boreal ecosystems. Despite inherent non-linearities, there is still a correlation between SIF and GPP at different temporal scales, driven by light, light use efficiency, and the effects of illumination and canopy structure.
Remote sensing of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) provides a powerful proxy for gross primary productivity (GPP). It is particularly promising in boreal ecosystems where seasonal downregulation of photosynthesis occurs without significant changes in canopy structure or chlorophyll content. The use of SIF as a proxy for GPP is complicated by inherent non-linearities due to both physical (illumination effects) and ecophysiological (light use efficiencies) controls at fine spatial (tower/leaf) and temporal (half-hourly) scales. To study the SIF-GPP relationship, we investigated the diurnal and seasonal dynamics of continuous tower-based measurements of SIF, GPP, and common vegetation indices at the Southern Old Black Spruce Site (SOBS) in Saskatchewan, CA over the course of two years. We find that SIF outperforms other vegetation indices as a proxy for GPP at all temporal scales but shows a non-linear relationship with GPP at a half-hourly resolution. At small temporal scales, SIF and GPP are predominantly driven by light and non-linearity between SIF and GPP is due to the light saturation of GPP. Averaged over daily and monthly scales, the relationship between SIF and GPP is linear due to a reduction in the observed PAR range. Seasonal changes in the light responses of SIF and GPP are driven by changes in light use efficiency which co-vary with changes in temperature, while illumination and canopy structure partially linearize the SIF-GPP relationship. Additionally, we find that the SIF-GPP relationship has a seasonal dependency. Our results help clarify the utility of SIF for estimating carbon assimilation in boreal forests.

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