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Published November 2015 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Drought onset mechanisms revealed by satellite solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence: Insights from two contrasting extreme events

Abstract

This study uses the droughts of 2011 in Texas and 2012 over the central Great Plains as case studies to explore the potential of satellite‐observed solar‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) for monitoring drought dynamics. We find that the spatial patterns of negative SIF anomalies from the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment 2 (GOME‐2) closely resembled drought intensity maps from the U.S. Drought Monitor for both events. The drought‐induced suppression of SIF occurred throughout 2011 but was exacerbated in summer in the Texas drought. This event was characterized by a persistent depletion of root zone soil moisture caused by yearlong below‐normal precipitation. In contrast, for the central Great Plains drought, warmer temperatures and relatively normal precipitation boosted SIF in the spring of 2012; however, a sudden drop in precipitation coupled with unusually high temperatures rapidly depleted soil moisture through evapotranspiration, leading to a rapid onset of drought in early summer. Accordingly, SIF reversed from above to below normal. For both regions, the GOME‐2 SIF anomalies were significantly correlated with those of root zone soil moisture, indicating that the former can potentially be used as proxy of the latter for monitoring agricultural droughts with different onset mechanisms. Further analyses indicate that the contrasting dynamics of SIF during these two extreme events were caused by changes in both fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation fPAR and fluorescence yield, suggesting that satellite SIF is sensitive to both structural and physiological/biochemical variations of vegetation. We conclude that the emerging satellite SIF has excellent potential for dynamic drought monitoring.

Additional Information

© 2015. American Geophysical Union. Received 11 JUL 2015. Accepted 27 OCT 2015. Accepted article online 2 NOV 2015. Published online 25 NOV 2015. We thank John Michael Wallace, Kingtse Mo, Ranga Myneni, and Kevin Bowman for helpful discussions, Yasuko Yoshida for providing SIF model products and Xitian Cai for clarification of NLDAS‐2 soil moisture datasets. The support for this research came from NASA the Development and Testing of Potential Indicators for the National Climate Assessment Program (grant NNX13AN39G awarded to The University of Texas at Austin). L.Gu was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research Program, Climate and Environmental Sciences Division. ORNL is managed by UT‐Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE‐AC05‐00OR22725. The GOME‐2 v26 level 3 SIF data are publicly available at http://avdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. The GOSAT SIF product is available in Frankenberg et al. [2011b]. The NLDAS‐2 products and MODIS fPAR are obtained from http://ldas.gsfc.nasa.gov/nldas/ and https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/, respectively.

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Published - Sun_et_al-2015-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research_3A_Biogeosciences.pdf

Supplemental Material - downloadSupplement_doi=10.1002_2F2015JG003150_file=jgrg20485-sup-0001-supinfo.pdf

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Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023