A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Close-range hyperspectral spectroscopy reveals leaf water content dynamics




AuthorsJunttila, S.; Hölttä, T.; Saarinen, N.; Kankare, V.; Yrttimaa, T.; Hyyppä, J.; Vastaranta, M.

PublisherELSEVIER SCIENCE INC

Publishing placeNEW YORK

Publication year2022

JournalRemote Sensing of Environment

Journal name in sourceREMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT

Journal acronymREMOTE SENS ENVIRON

Article number 113071

Volume277

Number of pages13

ISSN0034-4257

eISSN1879-0704

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2022.113071


Abstract
Water plays a crucial role in maintaining plant functionality and drives many ecophysiological processes. The distribution of water resources is in a continuous change due to global warming affecting the productivity of ecosystems around the globe, but there is a lack of non-destructive methods capable of continuous monitoring of plant and leaf water content that would help us in understanding the consequences of the redistribution of water. We studied the utilization of novel small hyperspectral sensors in the 1350-1650 nm and 2000-2450 nm spectral ranges in non-destructive estimation of leaf water content in laboratory and field conditions. We found that the sensors captured up to 96% of the variation in equivalent water thickness (EWT, g/m(2)) and up to 90% of the variation in relative water content (RWC). Further tests were done with an indoor plant (Dracaena marginate Lem.) by continuously measuring leaf spectra while drought conditions developed, which revealed detailed diurnal dynamics of leaf water content. The laboratory findings were supported by field measurements, where repeated leaf spectra measurements were in fair agreement (R-2 = 0.70) with RWC and showed similar diurnal dynamics. The estimation of leaf mass per area (LMA) using leaf spectra was investigated as a pathway to improved RWC estimation, but no significant improvement was found. We conclude that close-range hyper spectral spectroscopy can provide a novel tool for continuous measurement of leaf water content at the single leaf level and help us to better understand plant responses to varying environmental conditions.



Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:40