Abstract

Abstract. Global satellite measurements of solar-induced fluorescence (SIF) from chlorophyll over land and ocean have proven useful for a number of different applications related to physiology, phenology, and productivity of plants and phytoplankton. Terrestrial chlorophyll fluorescence is emitted throughout the red and far-red spectrum, producing two broad peaks near 683 and 736 nm. From ocean surfaces, phytoplankton fluorescence emissions are entirely from the red region (683 nm peak). Studies using satellite-derived SIF over land have focused almost exclusively on measurements in the far red (wavelengths > 712 nm), since those are the most easily obtained with existing instrumentation. Here, we examine new ways to use existing hyperspectral satellite data sets to retrieve red SIF (wavelengths < 712 nm) over both land and ocean. Red SIF is thought to provide complementary information to that from the far red for terrestrial vegetation. The satellite instruments that we use were designed to make atmospheric trace-gas measurements and are therefore not optimal for observing SIF; they have coarse spatial resolution and only moderate spectral resolution (0.5 nm). Nevertheless, these instruments, the Global Ozone Monitoring Instrument 2 (GOME-2) and the SCanning Imaging Absorption spectroMeter for Atmospheric CHartographY (SCIAMACHY), offer a unique opportunity to compare red and far-red terrestrial SIF at regional spatial scales. Terrestrial SIF has been estimated with ground-, aircraft-, or satellite-based instruments by measuring the filling-in of atmospheric and/or solar absorption spectral features by SIF. Our approach makes use of the oxygen (O2) γ band that is not affected by SIF. The SIF-free O2 γ band helps to estimate absorption within the spectrally variable O2 B band, which is filled in by red SIF. SIF also fills in the spectrally stable solar Fraunhofer lines (SFLs) at wavelengths both inside and just outside the O2 B band, which further helps to estimate red SIF emission. Our approach is then an extension of previous approaches applied to satellite data that utilized only the filling-in of SFLs by red SIF. We conducted retrievals of red SIF using an extensive database of simulated radiances covering a wide range of conditions. Our new algorithm produces good agreement between the simulated truth and retrievals and shows the potential of the O2 bands for noise reduction in red SIF retrievals as compared with approaches that rely solely on SFL filling. Biases seen with existing satellite data, most likely due to instrumental artifacts that vary in time, space, and with instrument, must be addressed in order to obtain reasonable results. Our 8-year record of red SIF observations over land with the GOME-2 allows for the first time reliable global mapping of monthly anomalies. These anomalies are shown to have similar spatiotemporal structure as those in the far red, particularly for drought-prone regions. There is a somewhat larger percentage response in the red as compared with the far red for these areas that are drought sensitive. We also demonstrate that good-quality ocean fluorescence line height retrievals can be achieved with GOME-2, SCIAMACHY, and similar instruments by utilizing the full complement of radiance measurements that span the red SIF emission feature.

Highlights

  • Measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence over both land and ocean are related to photosynthetic function and the carbon cycle and climate feedbacks

  • Averages of normalized fluorescence line height over ocean from SCIAMACHY appear noisy as compared with those from MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Some of these difficulties in retrieving red solarinduced fluorescence (SIF) should be overcome with the higher spectral resolution instruments designed for fluorescence retrievals (≤ 0.3 nm) planned with the Fluorescence Explorer (FLEX) mission (Drusch et al, 2016), as recently shown with modeling studies (Cogliati et al, 2015)

  • We obtain good results using simulated data that include wavelengths impacted by H2O absorption (692 < λ < 713 nm), we found unrealistic month-to-month variations in both far-red and red SIF magnitudes with real satellite data when using wavelengths impacted by H2O absorption

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Summary

Introduction

Measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence over both land and ocean are related to photosynthetic function and the carbon cycle and climate feedbacks. Fitting the peak as well as both shoulders of the red SIF emission feature allows for a clean separation of its spectral structure with that of monotonically decreasing or otherwise independent spectral effects such as those produced by water leaving radiance, atmospheric scattering and absorption, RRS in the atmosphere, and VRS in the ocean. Use of this large fitting window reduces the impact of instrumental noise and other artifacts such as nonlinearity effects that impact the small radiance levels typically measured over ocean. We estimate the spectral structure of T2 using PCs as described below

Generation of atmospheric PCs
Solving the nonlinear problem
Cloud filtering and quality control
Radiance spike removal
Zero-level adjustment
Comparison of GOME-2 and SCIAMACHY terrestrial red SIF
Oceanic SIF retrievals
Conclusions

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