Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published April 15, 2022 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Gross primary production (GPP) and red solar induced fluorescence (SIF) respond differently to light and seasonal environmental conditions in a subalpine conifer forest

Abstract

The phenology of montane conifer forests is likely to shift in response to climate change and altered seasonal dynamics of light, temperature, and moisture. Solar-induced fluorescence (SIF) is expected to provide substantial improvement for mapping temporal changes in evergreen gross primary production (GPP) over greenness-based remote sensing indices. The utility of SIF to monitor seasonal changes in the phenology of conifer photosynthesis depends on the degree to which GPP and SIF respond in synchrony to key environmental drivers. However, to what extent SIF and GPP become decoupled by responding differently to the combined effects of light and other environmental conditions remains unknown. The goal of this study was to characterize the responses of GPP and SIFred to a suite of environmental drivers at the half-hour time scale and determine how these relationships change across seasons. We analyzed one year of tower-based SIFred and eddy covariance-derived GPP data from a conifer forest at Niwot Ridge, Colorado. We compared the light responses of GPP and SIFred across the year, finding that SIFred increased in response to light earlier in the year than did GPP. The light response of GPP had a positive temperature dependence in spring, and this dependency reversed in summer due to increased evaporative demand, while the light response of SIFred was less temperature dependent. Using artificial neural network ensemble analysis, we found that from spring to summer, SIFred did not exhibit a parallel response to the seasonally dynamic temperature and moisture controls on GPP. In summer SIFred was not correlated with canopy conductance, suggesting that SIF is less sensitive to stomatal control than GPP. Our results suggest that, in conifers, photosystems begin to activate in spring prior to when water becomes available for photosynthesis, presenting a challenge for the use of SIF as a phenological indicator in conifer forests.

Additional Information

© 2022 Elsevier. Received 22 June 2021, Revised 1 March 2022, Accepted 7 March 2022, Available online 12 March 2022, Version of Record 12 March 2022. We would like to thank Trevor Keenan for providing Matlab code to run the ANN analysis on GitHub, as well as Sovan Lek for providing Matlab code to extract the PaD, Barry Logan for providing helpful discussion, Xueqian Wang for providing flux tower footprint data, and Blake Zimmerman for helping with partial derivative calculation. J. Yang gratefully acknowledges support from the Graduate Research Fellowship Program at the U.S. National Science Foundation. This work was supported by the NSF Macrosystems Biology and NEON-Enabled Science program at NSF (award 1926090). DB was supported by NASA Awards 80NSSC20K0010 and 80NSSC19M0130. US-NR1 was supported by DOE AmeriFlux Management Project subcontract number 7542010. The US-NR1 AmeriFlux site is supported by the U.S. DOE, Office of Science through the AmeriFlux Management Project (AMP) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory under Award Number 7094866. The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is sponsored by the NSF. The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Attached Files

Supplemental Material - 1-s2.0-S0168192322000971-mmc1.docx

Files

Files (1.0 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:d7a0c6611fd61fc1125bf4da15756953
1.0 MB Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023