Satellites map photosynthesis at high resolution
Precise measurement of the solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence enables scientists to quantify gross primary production
- Date:
- October 12, 2017
- Source:
- GFZ GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Helmholtz Centre
- Summary:
- Life on Earth is impossible without photosynthesis. It provides food and oxygen to all higher life forms and plays an important role in the climate system, since this process regulates the uptake of carbon dioxide from the Earth's atmosphere and its fixation in biomass. However, quantification of photosynthesis at the ecosystem-to-global scale remains uncertain. Now an international team of scientists have made a major step forward.
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Life on Earth is impossible without photosynthesis. It provides food and oxygen to all higher life forms and plays an important role in the climate system, since this process regulates the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the Earth´s atmosphere and its fixation in biomass. However, quantification of photosynthesis at the ecosystem-to-global scale remains uncertain.
Now an international team of scientists have made a major step forward. They used data of the NASA satellite "OCO-2" (Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2) to map the so-called solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) at a much higher spatial resolution than possible from any other space instrument. The weak but nevertheless detectable SIF signal emerges naturally on sunlight-exposed leaves, when chlorophyll molecules are excited by absorbed photons, and is a proxy for plant photosynthesis. These measurements will improve the understanding of the global carbon cycle, conclude Ying Sun from NASA´s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena and colleagues in the journal "Science." Among the authors are two researchers from Germany, Martin Jung from the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry (MPI-BGC) in Jena und Luis Guanter from the Helmholtz Centre Potsdam -- GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ).
The main strength of the SIF measurements from OCO-2 relies on their very high spatial resolution. "Until the launch of the OCO-2 satellite mission in 2014 we had global maps of SIF but at coarse spatial resolution, each pixel compromising areas of about 50 x 50 kilometres in the best case," says Luis Guanter from GFZ. The new data, which were extensively validated by independent measurements on the ground, are much richer. "They allow us to look into relationships between SIF and the gross primary production (GPP) -- the amount of carbon fixed by plants through photosynthesis -- at scales never explored before."
The authors found that one single linear relationship can be used to scale SIF to GPP across different vegetation types such as crops, forests and grasslands, which contradicts previous findings obtained with low-resolution data. This offers an exciting topic for further research. "Precise measurement of the solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence, derived from OCO-2 -- but also from follow-on missions such as the European Sentinel-5P, which will be launched coincidentally now on October 13th -- enables scientists to quantify gross primary production and its contribution to the global carbon cycle," says Guanter.
"With such improved satellite data we can for the first time combine global SIF observations with in-situ ecosystem scale data of gross carbon uptake. This has great potential to improve our global data-driven estimates of photosynthesis and other fluxes between land and atmosphere that are relevant for the Earth System" says Martin Jung from MPI-BGC.
Story Source:
Materials provided by GFZ GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Helmholtz Centre. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
- Y. Sun, C. Frankenberg, J. D. Wood, D. S. Schimel, M. Jung, L. Guanter, D. T. Drewry, M. Verma, A. Porcar-Castell, T. J. Griffis, L. Gu, T. S. Magney, P. Köhler, B. Evans, K. Yuen. OCO-2 advances photosynthesis observation from space via solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence. Science, 2017; 358 (6360): eaam5747 DOI: 10.1126/science.aam5747
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