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Radiative transfer and viewing geometry considerations for remote sensing as a proxy for carbon uptake in boreal ecosystems
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  • Zoe Pierrat,
  • Alexander Norton,
  • Lea Baskin Monk,
  • Nicholas Parazoo,
  • Andrew Maguire,
  • Katja Grossmann,
  • Troy Magney,
  • Alan Barr,
  • Bruce Johnson,
  • Jochen Stutz
Zoe Pierrat
University of California Los Angeles

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Alexander Norton
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
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Lea Baskin Monk
University of California Los Angeles
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Nicholas Parazoo
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)
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Andrew Maguire
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Katja Grossmann
Heidelberg University
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Troy Magney
University of California Davis
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Alan Barr
University of Saskatchewan
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Bruce Johnson
University of Saskatchewan
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Jochen Stutz
University of California Los Angeles
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Abstract

The boreal forest plays an important role in the global carbon cycle but has remained a significant source of uncertainty. Remote sensing can help us better understand the boreal forest’s role in the global carbon cycle. A faint light signal emitted by plant’s photosynthetic machinery, known as solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF), is a promising remotely sensed proxy for carbon uptake, also known as gross primary productivity (GPP), due to its connection to photosynthesis and its strong relationship with GPP when observed by satellite. However, SIF and GPP are fundamentally different quantities that describe distinct, but related, physiological processes. The relationship between SIF and GPP is therefore complicated by both physical and ecophysiological controls. In particular, the dynamics of the SIF/GPP relationship are poorly understood under varying viewing directions and light conditions. This is further complicated in evergreen systems where canopy clumping and the presence of needles create a unique radiative environment. We use a combination of tower-based SIF and GPP measurements from a boreal forest field site compared with a coupled biochemical-radiative transfer model to understand illumination effects on the SIF/GPP relationship. We find that GPP is amplified under cloudy sky conditions in both measurements and model results. SIF on the other hand, shows no significant difference between sunny or cloudy sky conditions in modeled results, but does show a difference in measurements. We suggest that these differences may be due to viewing geometry effects that are important for SIF under sunny sky conditions or the presence of clumping. Accounting for the differences in the SIF/GPP relationship therefore is critical for the utility of SIF as a proxy for GPP. In summation, our results provide insight into how we can use remote sensing as a tool to understand photosynthesis in the boreal forest.