Abstract

The photochemical reflectance index (PRI) is a promising remote sensing signal for monitoring vegetation physiology. Variations in leaf PRI are usually attributed to either the energy-dependent xanthophyll cycle or the carotenoid-chlorophyll ratio, both indicative of leaf physiology. However, canopy PRI is subject to soil, canopy structure, and incident and viewing angles, and thus has a weaker and more complicated relationship with vegetation photosynthetic activity or leaf pigment composition. Therefore, downscaling canopy PRI to the leaf level is essential for accurate remote sensing of vegetation physiology using PRI. An earlier investigation (P.Yang, RSE, 279, 113,133, 2022) illustrates that structural and angular variations in canopy PRI primarily result from varying degrees of soil interference. In this study, a soil correction method is proposed to mitigate the soil effects on top-of-canopy (TOC) reflectance at the PRI bands. The soil effects on TOC reflectance at 531 nm and 570 nm are respectively estimated as R531soil×R675/R675soil and R570soil×R675/R675soil, where R675 is TOC red reflectance, Rλsoil soil reflectance at wavelengthλ. R675/R675soil approximates the fraction of the observed sunlit soil, as leaves are nearly black at 675 nm due to strong absorption of chlorophyll, and R675 is mainly contributed from soil. To assess the effectiveness of the soil correction method, a wheat field dataset, a corn field dataset, and a simulated dataset, were utilized. The soil-adjusted and the original canopy PRI were compared with the leaf PRI for the real and synthetic scenarios that had various soil brightness, leaf chlorophyll content and canopy structure. Both the field and numerical experiments demonstrate that, for the canopies with low vegetation coverage and substantial soil contamination, the original canopy PRI was largely different from the leaf PRI, displaying substantial structural and angular dependence. In comparison, the soil-adjusted canopy PRI was more closely aligned with the PRI observed in the sunlit leaves in all three datasets. This study shows that accounting for the soil effects with TOC red reflectance allows downscaling canopy PRI to the leaf level. The soil-adjusted canopy PRI contributes to remote sensing of the xanthophyll cycle or the carotenoid-chlorophyll ratio from canopy PRI.

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