| Literature DB >> 28181244 |
Mirco Migliavacca1, Oscar Perez-Priego1, Micol Rossini2, Tarek S El-Madany1, Gerardo Moreno3, Christiaan van der Tol4, Uwe Rascher5, Anna Berninger1, Verena Bessenbacher1, Andreas Burkart5, Arnaud Carrara6, Francesco Fava7, Jin-Hong Guan1,8, Tiana W Hammer1, Kathrin Henkel1, Enrique Juarez-Alcalde3, Tommaso Julitta2, Olaf Kolle1, M Pilar Martín9, Talie Musavi1, Javier Pacheco-Labrador9, Andrea Pérez-Burgueño3, Thomas Wutzler1, Sönke Zaehle1, Markus Reichstein1.
Abstract
Sun-induced fluorescence (SIF) in the far-red region provides a new noninvasive measurement approach that has the potential to quantify dynamic changes in light-use efficiency and gross primary production (GPP). However, the mechanistic link between GPP and SIF is not completely understood. We analyzed the structural and functional factors controlling the emission of SIF at 760 nm (F760 ) in a Mediterranean grassland manipulated with nutrient addition of nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P) or nitrogen-phosphorous (NP). Using the soil-canopy observation of photosynthesis and energy (SCOPE) model, we investigated how nutrient-induced changes in canopy structure (i.e. changes in plant forms abundance that influence leaf inclination distribution function, LIDF) and functional traits (e.g. N content in dry mass of leaves, N%, Chlorophyll a+b concentration (Cab) and maximum carboxylation capacity (Vcmax )) affected the observed linear relationship between F760 and GPP. We conclude that the addition of nutrients imposed a change in the abundance of different plant forms and biochemistry of the canopy that controls F760 . Changes in canopy structure mainly control the GPP-F760 relationship, with a secondary effect of Cab and Vcmax . In order to exploit F760 data to model GPP at the global/regional scale, canopy structural variability, biodiversity and functional traits are important factors that have to be considered.Entities:
Keywords: canopy structure; far-red sun-induced fluorescence; functional traits; gross primary productivity (GPP); leaf inclination distribution function; nutrient manipulation; soil-canopy observation of photosynthesis and energy (SCOPE) model
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28181244 DOI: 10.1111/nph.14437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151