Remote sensing of sea surface Sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence: consequences of natural variations in the optical characteristics of phytoplankton and the quantum yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence

The rate of Sun-induced chlorophyll a fluorescence (SICF) observed at sea surface is determined by chlorophyll a concentration, incident irradiance, and optical and fluorescence properties of the phytoplanktonic population. In this study, the impact of natural variations in the two latter on the use...

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Veröffentlicht in:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING 1996-08, Vol.17 (12), p.2417-2448
Hauptverfasser: BABIN, M., MOREL, A., GENTILI, B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The rate of Sun-induced chlorophyll a fluorescence (SICF) observed at sea surface is determined by chlorophyll a concentration, incident irradiance, and optical and fluorescence properties of the phytoplanktonic population. In this study, the impact of natural variations in the two latter on the use of remotely sensed SICF to determine ocean surface chlorophyll a concentration, is assessed using a simple parameterization of phytoplankton optical properties and a model describing the variations in the quantum yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence as a function of environmental factors, such as excess irradiance and nutrient limitations. It is shown that (1) variations in the optical properties of phytoplankton are the main cause of non-linearity in the relationship between SICF and chlorophyll a concentration, (2) the extent of spatial variations in the rate of fluorescence per unit chlorophyll a concentration and irradiance, at the level of a typical sensor scene, prevents the use of a linear relationship between SICF and chlorophyll a concentration even at local scales and (3) the optical properties of the ocean surface layer play an important role in modifying the SICF signal. Nevertheless, the parameterizations presented in this paper may represent a reasonably sound approach for a meaningful use of SICF in view of detecting the chlorophyll a concentration within the upper layer of the ocean. Interestingly, it is also shown that the detection threshold of SICF could be significantly lower than the one currently expected.
ISSN:0143-1161
1366-5901
DOI:10.1080/01431169608948781