Can changes in leaf water potential be assessed spectrally?

Funct Plant Biol

Department of Plant Sciences, Technische Universität München, Emil-Ramann-Str. 2, D-85350 Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany.

Published: June 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Leaf water potential (LWP) is a key indicator of a plant's water status, but traditional methods of measuring it are slow and can't keep up with rapid environmental changes.
  • Spectrometric measurements offer a quicker, non-destructive alternative, yet their accuracy in reflecting LWP is complicated by variations in plant development and environmental conditions.
  • Experiments showed that while spectrometric measurements can correlate well with LWP—especially in response to light changes—global relationships cannot be established easily due to the influence of timing and stress levels, suggesting a combination of methods could improve screening efficiency.

Article Abstract

Leaf water potential (LWP) is an important indicator of plant water status. However, its determination via classical pressure-chamber measurements is tedious and time-consuming. Moreover, such methods cannot easily account for rapid changes in this parameter arising from changes in environmental conditions. Spectrometric measurements, by contrast, have the potential for fast and non-destructive measurements of plant water status, but are not unproblematic. Spectral characteristics of plants vary across plant development stages and are also influenced by environmental factors. Thus, it remains unclear whether changes in leaf water potential per se can reliably be detected spectrometrically or whether such measurements also reflect autocorrelated changes in the leaf water content (LWC) or the aerial plant biomass. We tested the accuracy of spectrometric measurements in this context under controlled climate chamber conditions in series of six experiments that minimised perturbing influences but allowed for significant changes in the LWP. Short-term exposure of dense stands of plants to increasing or decreasing artificial light intensities in a growth chamber more markedly decreased LWP than LWC in both wheat and maize. Significant relationships (R2-values 0.74-0.92) between LWP and new spectral indices ((R940/R960)/NDVI; R940/R960) were detected with or without significant changes in LWC of both crop species. The exact relationships found, however, were influenced strongly by the date of measurement or water stress induced. Thus, global spectral relationships measuring LWP probably cannot be established across plant development stages. Even so, spectrometric measurements supplemented by a reduced calibration dataset from pressure chamber measurements might still prove to be a fast and accurate method for screening large numbers of diverse lines.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/FP11021DOI Listing

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