New global observations of the terrestrial carbon cycle from GOSAT: Patterns of plant fluorescence with gross primary productivity

被引:401
|
作者
Frankenberg, Christian [1 ]
Fisher, Joshua B. [1 ]
Worden, John [1 ]
Badgley, Grayson [1 ]
Saatchi, Sassan S. [1 ]
Lee, Jung-Eun [1 ]
Toon, Geoffrey C. [1 ]
Butz, Andre [2 ]
Jung, Martin [3 ]
Kuze, Akihiko [4 ]
Yokota, Tatsuya [5 ]
机构
[1] CALTECH, Jet Prop Lab, Pasadena, CA 91109 USA
[2] Karlsruhe Inst Technol, Inst Meteorol & Climate Res, D-76344 Leopoldshafen, Germany
[3] Max Planck Inst Biogeochem, Biogeochem Model Data Integrat Grp, D-07745 Jena, Germany
[4] Japan Aerosp Explorat Agcy, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058505, Japan
[5] Natl Inst Environm Studies, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058506, Japan
关键词
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION; FOURIER-TRANSFORM SPECTROMETER; GASES OBSERVING SATELLITE; SUN-INDUCED FLUORESCENCE; CHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; MODEL; LEAF; EFFICIENCY;
D O I
10.1029/2011GL048738
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Our ability to close the Earth's carbon budget and predict feedbacks in a warming climate depends critically on knowing where, when and how carbon dioxide is exchanged between the land and atmosphere. Terrestrial gross primary production (GPP) constitutes the largest flux component in the global carbon budget, however significant uncertainties remain in GPP estimates and its seasonality. Empirically, we show that global spaceborne observations of solar induced chlorophyll fluorescence - occurring during photosynthesis - exhibit a strong linear correlation with GPP. We found that the fluorescence emission even without any additional climatic or model information has the same or better predictive skill in estimating GPP as those derived from traditional remotely-sensed vegetation indices using ancillary data and model assumptions. In boreal summer the generally strong linear correlation between fluorescence and GPP models weakens, attributable to discrepancies in savannas/croplands (18-48% higher fluorescence-based GPP derived by simple linear scaling), and high-latitude needleleaf forests (28-32% lower fluorescence). Our results demonstrate that retrievals of chlorophyll fluorescence provide direct global observational constraints for GPP and open an entirely new viewpoint on the global carbon cycle. We anticipate that global fluorescence data in combination with consolidated plant physiological fluorescence models will be a step-change in carbon cycle research and enable an unprecedented robustness in the understanding of the current and future carbon cycle. Citation: Frankenberg, C., et al. (2011), New global observations of the terrestrial carbon cycle from GOSAT: Patterns of plant fluorescence with gross primary productivity, Geophys. Res. Lett., 38, L17706, doi: 10.1029/2011GL048738.
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页数:6
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