Use of a Networked Digital Camera to Estimate Net CO2Uptake of a Desiccation‐Tolerant Moss
Simple visible‐light digital cameras offer a potential for expanded forms of plant ecological research. The mossTortula princepsundergoes changes in reflected visible light during cycles of drying and hydrating in the field, and the MossCam project has collected digital images ofT. princepsat least...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of plant sciences 2006-07, Vol.167 (4), p.751-758 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng ; jpn |
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Zusammenfassung: | Simple visible‐light digital cameras offer a potential for expanded forms of plant ecological research. The mossTortula princepsundergoes changes in reflected visible light during cycles of drying and hydrating in the field, and the MossCam project has collected digital images ofT. princepsat least daily since 2003. Laboratory studies can be used to calibrate these images to indicate field physiological conditions. Drying the moss 6 d in the laboratory resulted in a decrease of net CO2uptake to near 0; recovery after rewetting occurred within 10 min. The difference in reflectance between hydrated and dryT. princepswas maximal ca. 550 nm, and maximal net CO2uptake was linearly related to the green:red ratio of laboratory images when net CO2uptake was positive. Using the green:red ratio of field images and otherwise assuming ideal conditions, the total carbon gain for a 6‐d period around a 1.3‐mm rain event was ca. 208 mmol CO2m−2, equivalent to 69 d of respiration under dry conditions. Using a visible‐light digital camera with micrometeorological data and laboratory‐based gas exchange measurements,T. princepscan be used as a model species for simple field estimations of photosynthesis, carbon gain, and phenological events. |
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ISSN: | 1058-5893 1537-5315 |
DOI: | 10.1086/503786 |