Ecology and Evolution (Jan 2018)

Changing methodology results in operational drift in the meaning of leaf area index, necessitating implementation of foliage layer index

  • Gillian L. Rapson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 638 – 644

Abstract

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Abstract Leaf area index (LAI) was developed to describe the number of layers of foliage in a monoculture. Subsequent expansion into measurement by remote‐sensing methods has resulted in misrepresentation of LAI. The new name foliage layer index (FLI) is applied to a more simply estimated version of Goodall's “cover repetition,” that is, the number of layers of foliage a single species has, either within a community or in monoculture. The relationship of FLI with cover is demonstrated in model communities, and some potential relationships between FLI and species’ habit are suggested. FLIcomm is a new formulation for the number of layers of foliage in a mixed‐species’ community. LAI should now be reserved for remote‐sensing applications in mixed communities, where it is probably a nonlinear measure of the density of light‐absorbing pigments.

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