Search results for "Specific leaf area"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

A Methodology to Derive Global Maps of Leaf Traits Using Remote Sensing and Climate Data

2018

This paper introduces a modular processing chain to derive global high-resolution maps of leaf traits. In particular, we present global maps at 500 m resolution of specific leaf area, leaf dry matter content, leaf nitrogen and phosphorus content per dry mass, and leaf nitrogen/phosphorus ratio. The processing chain exploits machine learning techniques along with optical remote sensing data (MODIS/Landsat) and climate data for gap filling and up-scaling of in-situ measured leaf traits. The chain first uses random forests regression with surrogates to fill gaps in the database (> 45% of missing entries) and maximizes the global representativeness of the trait dataset. Plant species are then a…

0106 biological sciencesFOS: Computer and information sciences010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSpecific leaf areaClimateBos- en LandschapsecologieSoil ScienceFOS: Physical sciencesApplied Physics (physics.app-ph)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesStatistics - ApplicationsGoodness of fitAbundance (ecology)Machine learningForest and Landscape EcologyApplications (stat.AP)Computers in Earth SciencesPlant ecologyVegetatie0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingMathematics2. Zero hungerPlant traitsVegetationData stream miningClimate; Landsat; Machine learning; MODIS; Plant ecology; Plant traits; Random forests; Remote sensing; Soil Science; Geology; Computers in Earth SciencesGlobal MapRegression analysisGeologyPhysics - Applied Physics15. Life on landRandom forestsRemote sensingPE&RCRandom forestMODISTraitVegetatie Bos- en LandschapsecologieVegetation Forest and Landscape EcologyLandsat
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Responses of Prunus ferganensis, Prunus persica and two interspecific hybrids to moderate drought stress

2003

Prunus ferganensis (Kost. & Riab) Kov. & Kost, a close relative of the cultivated peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch.), is native to arid regions of central Asia and may possess traits valuable for improving drought tolerance of commercial peach varieties. One distinguishing feature of P. ferganensis is its prominent, elongated, unbranched leaf venation pattern, which behaves as a simple recessive trait in segregating populations of P. ferganensis x P. persica hybrids. To understand whether this trait could be used as a marker in breeding for drought tolerance, we investigated the association between leaf morphological and physiological parameters related to drought response in P. ferganensi…

L-Iditol 2-DehydrogenaseSpecific leaf areaPhysiologyClimatic adaptationDrought tolerancePlant ScienceBiologyTreesPrunusDry weightSorbitolLeaf sizePhotosynthesisgas exchange non-hydraulic signals peach photosynthesis sorbitol water potentialHybridDehydrationfungiWaterfood and beveragesPlant TranspirationPlant LeavesSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeAgronomyPrunusRootstockSugar Alcohol DehydrogenasesTree Physiology
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Gaussian processes retrieval of leaf parameters from a multi-species reflectance, absorbance and fluorescence dataset.

2013

Abstract: Biochemical and structural leaf properties such as chlorophyll content (Chl), nitrogen content (N), leaf water content (LWC), and specific leaf area (SLA) have the benefit to be estimated through nondestructive spectral measurements. Current practices, however, mainly focus on a limited amount of wavelength bands while more information could be extracted from other wavelengths in the full range (400-2500 nm) spectrum. In this research, leaf characteristics were estimated from a field-based multi-species dataset, covering a wide range in leaf structures and Chl concentrations. The dataset contains leaves with extremely high Chl concentrations (>100 mu g cm(-2)), which are seldom es…

ChlorophyllSpecific leaf areaNitrogenBiophysicsRed edgeTreesAbsorbancesymbols.namesakeRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingGaussian processWater contentBiologyRemote sensingMathematicsRadiationRadiological and Ultrasound TechnologyPhysicsHyperspectral imagingWaterRegression analysisPlant LeavesChemistrySpectrometry FluorescencesymbolsCurve fittingAlgorithmsJournal of photochemistry and photobiology. B, Biology
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Plant functional trait response to environmental drivers across European temperate forest understorey communities

2020

Functional traits respond to environmental drivers, hence evaluating trait-environment relationships across spatial environmental gradients can help to understand how multiple drivers influence plant communities. Global-change drivers such as changes in atmospheric nitrogen deposition occur worldwide, but affect community trait distributions at the local scale, where resources (e.g. light availability) and conditions (e.g. soil pH) also influence plant communities. We investigate how multiple environmental drivers affect community trait responses related to resource acquisition (plant height, specific leaf area (SLA), woodiness, and mycorrhizal status) and regeneration (seed mass, lateral s…

0106 biological sciencesSpecific leaf areaNitrogenPlant ScienceForestsBiologyTemperate deciduous forestGlobal Warming010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSoilground vegetationBosecologie en BosbeheerGlobal environmental change/dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/biologyherbaceous layerplant–soil relationsEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerEcologyTemperate forestPlant communityGeneral MedicineUnderstoryPlants15. Life on landSoil typePE&RCForest Ecology and Forest ManagementEuropePlant LeavesEcosystems Researchresource acquisition13. Climate actionregenerationLitterSpecies richness010606 plant biology & botany
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Spatial Variation of Leaf Optical Properties in a Boreal Forest Is Influenced by Species and Light Environment

2017

Leaf Optical Properties (LOPs) convey information relating to temporally dynamic photosynthetic activity and biochemistry. LOPs are also sensitive to variability in anatomically related traits such as Specific Leaf Area (SLA), via the interplay of intra-leaf light scattering and absorption processes. Therefore, variability in such traits, which may demonstrate little plasticity over time, potentially disrupts remote sensing estimates of photosynthesis or biochemistry across space. To help to disentangle the various factors that contribute to the variability of LOPs, we defined baseline variation as variation in LOPs that occurs across space, but not time. Next we hypothesized that there wer…

0106 biological sciencesCanopyPIGMENT010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSpecific leaf areaPlant SciencePhotochemical Reflectance IndexAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciencesleaf optical propertiesPHOTOCHEMICAL REFLECTANCE INDEXCANOPYLEAVESCHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE EMISSIONNITROGEN-CONTENTSCOTS PINEChlorophyll fluorescenceOriginal ResearchCONIFER NEEDLES0105 earth and related environmental sciences4112 Forestryphotosynthesischlorophyll fluorescencebiologyEcologyTaigaScots pine15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationDECIDUOUS FORESTbaselineBoreal13. Climate actionEnvironmental scienceSpatial variabilityPRI010606 plant biology & botanyFrontiers in Plant Science
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Varied response of underground and aboveground plant matter: functional diversity of three different vegetational types after translocation to reclai…

2019

The indicators of functional diversity are increasingly used to assess the conservation effectiveness of the most valuable habitats. However, little is known about the response of functional traits, their diversity, and divergence in plant communities after translocation. To assess how functional diversity changes on dry heath, meadow, and fen after translocation of entire turfs of vegetation from an airport area to the Botanical Garden in Radzionkow, we used leaf–height–seed (LHS) traits (specific leaf area, height, and seed mass) and vegetative traits (bud bank size, bud bank depth, and lateral spread). We also measured community weighted means and multifunctional diversity metrics (funct…

Specific leaf areaVegetative reproductionSoil Science010501 environmental sciencesDevelopmentBiology01 natural sciencesfunctional divergenceEnvironmental Chemistryvegetativetraits0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceLHS traitsEcologyconservationfunctional richnessPlant community04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesVegetationvegetative traitsHabitat040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSpecies evennessSpecies richnesspostindustrial landhuman activitiesFunctional divergenceLand Degradation & Development
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Biometrical and ecological observations on Cistus salvifolius L.

1993

Abstract Biometrical observations on Cistus salvifolius L. (Cistaceae), a species with a very variable morphology, are presented: data, collected in Sicily, are relative to three environments in which populations of Cistus salvifolius live: garigue, maquis, pinewood. Measurements are compared with other ones, found in the literature, and in some cases they disagree or supply useful indications. On the basis of the different light regimes in the three environments, and of the parameters in which the difference among the three populations is most evident, some observations about the reaction to shade in Cistus salvifolius were made. On the basis of the few data collected, the intraspecific di…

Specific leaf areaEcologyBotanyCistusPlant ScienceCistaceaeStem lengthBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPetiole (botany)Intraspecific competitionGiornale botanico italiano
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