The photosynthetic rate has a nonlinear relationship with PAR during the day. We previously developed an algorithm for estimating GPP capacity, which is defined GPP under low-stress condition, using light response curves (LRCs). In this study, we studied the characteristics of LRC parameters of the initial slope and the maximum gross photosynthesis rate (Pmax), and formulas to calculate Pmax from the relationship between the chlorophyll index of the green and near-infrared (NIR) bands (CIgreen) and the GPP capacity at PAR = 2000 μmol m−2 s−1 (GP2000) for nine vegetation types spanning tropical to subarctic climates on the Eurasian and North American continents using eddy covariance flux measurements and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) data. The slope of the relationship between CIgreen and GP2000 was highest for sites dominated by herbaceous plants such as open shrubland, savanna, and cropland (rice paddy); it was lower at sites dominated by woody plants. The yearly GPP/GPP capacity ratio was close to one in flux data. When the method was applied to satellite data, the daily GPP capacity exhibited a similar seasonal pattern to that of the Flux GPP and MODIS GPP products. Under high dryness conditions, Flux GPP showed the drop from the GPP capacity estimated from CIgreen and diurnal PAR data around noon, and they were nearly identical during the early morning and late afternoon. The instantaneous GPP capacity could be considered the baseline of the instantaneous GPP with stress-free conditions and important for quantifying midday depression at the sub-day scale.
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