Remotely-sensed detection of effects of extreme droughts on gross primary production

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作者
Sara Vicca
Manuela Balzarolo
Iolanda Filella
André Granier
Mathias Herbst
Alexander Knohl
Bernard Longdoz
Martina Mund
Zoltan Nagy
Krisztina Pintér
Serge Rambal
Jan Verbesselt
Aleixandre Verger
Achim Zeileis
Chao Zhang
Josep Peñuelas
机构
[1] Center of Excellence PLECO (Plant and Vegetation Ecology),Biology Department
[2] University of Antwerp,Departamento de Biologia
[3] CREAF,Department of Statistics
[4] Cerdanyola del Vallès 08913,undefined
[5] CSIC,undefined
[6] Global Ecology Unit,undefined
[7] CREAF-CEAB-UAB,undefined
[8] UMR 1137 Ecologie et Ecophysiologie Forestières,undefined
[9] Thünen Institute of Climate Smart Agriculture,undefined
[10] Bioclimatology,undefined
[11] University of Göttingen,undefined
[12] Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones,undefined
[13] University of Göttingen,undefined
[14] MTA-SZIE Plant Ecology Research Group,undefined
[15] Szent István University,undefined
[16] CEFE UMR 5175,undefined
[17] CNRS - Université de Montpellier - Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier - EPHE,undefined
[18] Universidade Federal de Lavras,undefined
[19] Laboratory of Geo-Information Science and Remote Sensing,undefined
[20] Wageningen University,undefined
[21] Faculty of Economics and Statistics,undefined
[22] Universität Innsbruck,undefined
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摘要
Severe droughts strongly impact photosynthesis (GPP), and satellite imagery has yet to demonstrate its ability to detect drought effects. Especially changes in vegetation functioning when vegetation state remains unaltered (no browning or defoliation) pose a challenge to satellite-derived indicators. We evaluated the performance of different satellite indicators to detect strong drought effects on GPP in a beech forest in France (Hesse), where vegetation state remained largely unaffected while GPP decreased substantially. We compared the results with three additional sites: a Mediterranean holm oak forest (Puéchabon), a temperate beech forest (Hainich), and a semi-arid grassland (Bugacpuszta). In Hesse, a three-year reduction in GPP following drought was detected only by the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI). The Photochemical Reflectance Index (PRI) also detected this drought effect, but only after normalization for absorbed light. In Puéchabon normalized PRI outperformed the other indicators, while the short-term drought effect in Hainich was not detected by any tested indicator. In contrast, most indicators, but not PRI, captured the drought effects in Bugacpuszta. Hence, PRI improved detection of drought effects on GPP in forests and we propose that PRI normalized for absorbed light is considered in future algorithms to estimate GPP from space.
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