Accounting for Changes in Radiation Improves the Ability of SIF to Track
Water Stress-Induced Losses in Summer GPP in a Temperate Deciduous
Forest
Abstract
As global observations of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF)
have become available from multiple satellite platforms, SIF is
increasingly used as a proxy for photosynthetic activity and ecosystem
productivity. Because the relationship between SIF and gross primary
productivity (GPP) depends on a variety of factors including ecosystem
type and environmental conditions, it is necessary to study SIF
observations across various spatiotemporal scales and ecosystems. To
explore how SIF signals relate to productivity over a temperate
deciduous forest, we deployed a PhotoSpec spectrometer system at the
University of Michigan Biological Station AmeriFlux site (US-UMB) in the
northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan during the 2018 and 2019 growing
seasons. The PhotoSpec system consisted of two narrowband spectrometers,
for the retrieval of SIF in the red (680-686 nm) and far-red (745-758
nm) regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, and a broadband
spectrometer for the assessment of vegetation indices. We found that SIF
correlated with GPP across diurnal and seasonal cycles, but that SIF
irradiances were more strongly related to downwelling radiation than
GPP. However, while this dependence of SIF on radiation obscured drought
signals in SIF itself, we demonstrate that a SIF response to severe
drought was apparent as a decrease in relative SIF. These results
highlight the potential of SIF for detecting stress-induced losses in
forest productivity. Additionally, we found that the red:far-red SIF
ratio did not exhibit a response to drought stress, but was largely
driven by seasonal and interannual changes in canopy structure, as well
as by synoptic changes in downwelling radiation.