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

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-stat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Remote sensing of environment 2015-10, Vol.168, p.420-436
Hauptverfasser: Ač, Alexander, Malenovský, Zbyněk, Olejníčková, Julie, Gallé, Alexander, Rascher, Uwe, Mohammed, Gina
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container_start_page 420
container_title Remote sensing of environment
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creator Ač, Alexander
Malenovský, Zbyněk
Olejníčková, Julie
Gallé, Alexander
Rascher, Uwe
Mohammed, Gina
description 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. •Comprehensive meta-analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence for stress detection•Water deficit induces decline in vegetation steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence.•Heat decreases but chilling increases plant steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence.•Steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence has difficulty to reveal nitrogen deficiency.•Red to far-red fluorescence ratio can indicate temperature and nutrition stress.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.rse.2015.07.022
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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. 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subjects Active laser-induced fluorescence
FLEX satellite mission
Nitrogen
Passive sun-induced fluorescence
Photosynthesis
Random-effects meta-analysis
Steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence
Stress
Temperature
Water
title Meta-analysis assessing potential of steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence for remote sensing detection of plant water, temperature and nitrogen stress
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