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The physiological basis for estimating photosynthesis from Chl<i>a</i> fluorescence

Jimei Han, C. Y. Chang, Lianhong Gu, Yong‐Jiang Zhang, Eliot W. Meeker, Troy S. Magney, Anthony P. Walker, Jiaming Wen, Oz Kira, Sarah McNaull, Ying Sun

2022New Phytologist82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary Solar‐induced Chl fluorescence (SIF) offers the potential to curb large uncertainties in the estimation of photosynthesis across biomes and climates, and at different spatiotemporal scales. However, it remains unclear how SIF should be used to mechanistically estimate photosynthesis. In this study, we built a quantitative framework for the estimation of photosynthesis, based on a mechanistic light reaction model with the Chl a fluorescence of Photosystem II (SIF PSII ) as an input (MLR‐SIF). Utilizing 29 C 3 and C 4 plant species that are representative of major plant biomes across the globe, we confirmed the validity of this framework at the leaf level. The MLR‐SIF model is capable of accurately reproducing photosynthesis for all C 3 and C 4 species under diverse light, temperature, and CO 2 conditions. We further tested the robustness of the MLR‐SIF model using Monte Carlo simulations, and found that photosynthesis estimates were much less sensitive to parameter uncertainties relative to the conventional Farquhar, von Caemmerer, Berry (FvCB) model because of the additional independent information contained in SIF PSII . Once inferred from direct observables of SIF, SIF PSII provides ‘parameter savings’ to the MLR‐SIF model, compared to the mechanistically equivalent FvCB model, and thus avoids the uncertainties arising as a result of imperfect model parameterization. Our findings set the stage for future efforts to employ SIF mechanistically to improve photosynthesis estimates across a variety of scales, functional groups, and environmental conditions.

Topics & Concepts

PhotosynthesisChlorophyll fluorescenceFluorescenceBiophysicsBotanyBasis (linear algebra)BiologyChemistryPhysicsMathematicsOpticsGeometryPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsPlant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics