Abstract

Organ temperature and variation therein plays a key role in plant functioning and its responses to e.g. climate change. There is a strong feedback between organ, especially leaf, temperature and the climate within the canopy (canopy climate), which in turn interacts with the climate outside the canopy (ambient climate). For greenhouses, the determinants of this interplay and how they drive differences between canopy and ambient climate are poorly understood. Yet, as many experiments on both regular greenhouse crops and field crops are done in greenhouses, this is crucial to know. Therefore, we designed an experiment to quantify the differences between ambient and canopy climate and leaf temperature. A path analysis was performed to quantify the interactions between components of the greenhouse canopy-climate system. We found that with high radiation the canopy climate can be up to 5°C cooler than the ambient climate, while for cloudy days this was only 2°C. Canopy relative humidity (RH) was up to 25% higher compared to ambient RH. We showed that radiation is very important for these climate differences, but that this effect could be partly counteracted by turning off supplementary light (i.e. due to its indirect effects e.g. changing light distribution). Leaf temperature was substantially different, both higher and lower, from the canopy air temperature. This difference was determined by leaf area index (LAI), temperature of the heating pipe and the use of supplementary light, which all strongly influence radiation, either shortwave or thermal radiation. The difference between leaf and ambient air temperature could be decreased by decreasing the LAI or increasing the temperature of the heating pipe.

Highlights

  • Organ temperature and variation therein plays a key role in plant functioning and its responses to e.g. climate change

  • The analysis showed that the difference between ambient and canopy temperature was determined by the leaf area index (LAI), the ambient temperature, radiation and temperature of the heating pipes below the canopy

  • We aimed to quantify the relative importance of the ambient climate, climate control measures and the developing canopy on 1.) the canopy climate, and 2.) the leaf temperature

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Summary

Introduction

Organ temperature and variation therein plays a key role in plant functioning and its responses to e.g. climate change. Organ temperature directly affects photosynthetic carbon gain and organ water losses. Quantification of interactions in a greenhouse-canopy system provided assistance in the form of maintenance of the crop and the experiment. Glastuinbouw NL provided advice on the different available rose cultivars. Half year progress of the project was discussed in detail with these companies, but they had no further role in study design, data collection and analysis, or preparation of the manuscript

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