Abstract

AbstractAccurate characterization of gross primary productivity (GPP) is critically important in assessing mangrove carbon budgets, but the current knowledge of the temporal variations of GPP in evergreen mangroves is very limited. Remote sensing of sun‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) has emerged as a promising approach to approximating GPP across ecosystems, but its capability for tracking GPP in evergreen mangroves has not been assessed. The SIF‐GPP link at a subtropical mangrove and its environmental controls are explored using 1‐year time‐series measurements from tower‐based hyperspectral and eddy covariance systems. Both the relationship between SIF and GPP as well as that between SIFy (SIF yield: the ratio of SIF over absorbed photosynthetically active radiation [APAR]) and LUE (light use efficiency: the ratio of GPP over APAR) at diurnal and seasonal time scales are analyzed. The temporal variations of SIF and GPP shared overall similar changing patterns, but their functional relationship tended to be time scale‐dependent. Midday depressions in SIF were observed when environmental stresses occurred around noon (including excess light and high VPD), and the strength of the SIF‐GPP link was affected by changing environmental conditions. The SIFy‐LUE relationship was temporally more dynamic, tending to match during midday hours but diverge from each other during morning and afternoon hours. These findings confirm SIF can serve as a potential remotely sensed indicator of mangrove canopy photosynthesis. This paper provides the first, high temporal‐resolution, continuous SIF measurements in mangroves, and highlights the importance of the impacts of environmental conditions on the SIF‐GPP relationship.

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