Disentangling Changes in the Spectral Shape of Chlorophyll Fluorescence: Implications for Remote Sensing of Photosynthesis

  • Troy S. Magney
  • , Christian Frankenberg
  • , Philipp Köhler
  • , Gretchen North
  • , Thomas S. Davis
  • , Christian Dold
  • , Debsunder Dutta
  • , Joshua B. Fisher
  • , Katja Grossmann
  • , Alexis Harrington
  • , Jerry Hatfield
  • , Jochen Stutz
  • , Ying Sun
  • , Albert Porcar-Castell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

104 Scopus citations

Abstract

Novel satellite measurements of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) can improve our understanding of global photosynthesis; however, little is known about how to interpret the controls on its spectral variability. To address this, we disentangle simultaneous drivers of fluorescence spectra by coupling active and passive fluorescence measurements with photosynthesis. We show empirical and mechanistic evidence for where, why, and to what extent leaf fluorescence spectra change. Three distinct components explain more than 95% of the variance in leaf fluorescence spectra under both steady-state and changing illumination conditions. A single spectral shape of fluorescence explains 84% of the variance across a wide range of species. The magnitude of this shape responds to absorbed light and photosynthetic up/down regulation; meanwhile, chlorophyll concentration and nonphotochemical quenching control 9% and 3% of the remaining spectral variance, respectively. The spectral shape of fluorescence is remarkably stable where most current satellite retrievals occur (“far-red,” >740nm), and dynamic downregulation of photosynthesis reduces fluorescence magnitude similarly across the 670- to 850-nm range. We conduct an exploratory analysis of hourly red and far-red canopy SIF in soybean, which shows a subtle change in red:far-red fluorescence coincident with photosynthetic downregulation but is overshadowed by longer-term changes in canopy chlorophyll and structure. Based on our leaf and canopy analysis, caution should be taken when attributing large changes in the spectral shape of remotely sensed SIF to plant stress, particularly if data acquisition is temporally sparse. Ultimately, changes in SIF magnitude at wavelengths greater than 740 nm alone may prove sufficient for tracking photosynthetic dynamics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1491-1507
Number of pages17
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Volume124
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2019

Keywords

  • chlorophyll fluorescence
  • nonphotochemical quenching
  • photosynthesis
  • remote sensing
  • solar-induced fluorescence
  • vegetation spectroscopy

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Disentangling Changes in the Spectral Shape of Chlorophyll Fluorescence: Implications for Remote Sensing of Photosynthesis'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this