International Journal of Applied Earth Observations and Geoinformation (Mar 2022)
Partitioning of three phenology rhythms in American tropical and subtropical forests using remotely sensed solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and field litterfall observations
Abstract
The climatic drivers of leaf phenology and water stress regulation strategies in tropical/subtropical forest biomes are poorly understood on the continental scale. Widespread field observations and remotely sensed plant phenology and physiology data across tropical forest ecosystems at various scales provide new insight into the response of tropical forests to climate change. In this study, we collected seasonal litterfall data from 65 sites across tropical/subtropical America for analysis against remotely sensed photosynthetic and climatic indicators. We proposed an integrated field and remote sensing approach for partitioning three rhythms of forest phenology across tropical and subtropical America in response to various wet- and dry-season variabilities in sunlight, liquid water supply and atmospheric dryness. The results showed that in a dry-season leaf shedding and rejuvenation phenology, trees encounter limited soil water stress, shift to a young canopy by replacing old leaves with new leaves, and regulate water use through the xylem to maximize light capture and productivity. In a wet-season leaf shedding & rejuvenation phenology, trees on the contrary shed and rejuvenate canopy leaves to maximize light use and increase photosynthesis during the sunny wet season. Trees show a dominant stomatal regulation of seasonal water use, resulting in considerable seasonal changes in canopy photosynthesis and transpiration. However, in a dry-season leaf shedding and wet-season rejuvenation phenology, trees shed leaves due to water stresses and grew new leaves to maximize photosynthesis with sufficient water availability. Trees shift from wet-season stomatal regulation to dry-season xylem regulation with fewer canopy leaves. Our findings provide new physiological insight into the mechanism of sunlight availability, liquid water supply and atmospheric dryness in driving leaf phenology and photosynthesis across tropical and subtropical forests.