AI Article Synopsis

  • Accurate monitoring of vegetation stress is essential for improving the modeling and forecasting of primary production, especially as climate change leads to more heatwaves and droughts.
  • Variabilities in formaldehyde (HCHO) concentrations in the atmosphere are primarily influenced by local emissions of biogenic and pyrogenic volatile organic compounds from plants under stress.
  • New analytical techniques now allow for better detection of extreme events in satellite data, revealing that HCHO is a reliable indicator of vegetation response to significant climate stress, particularly in forests.

Article Abstract

Accurate monitoring of vegetation stress is required for better modelling and forecasting of primary production, in a world where heatwaves and droughts are expected to become increasingly prevalent. Variability in formaldehyde (HCHO) concentrations in the troposphere is dominated by local emissions of short-lived biogenic (BVOC) and pyrogenic volatile organic compounds. BVOCs are emitted by plants in a rapid protective response to abiotic stress, mediated by the energetic status of leaves (the excess of reducing power when photosynthetic light and dark reactions are decoupled, as occurs when stomata close in response to water stress). Emissions also increase exponentially with leaf temperature. New analytical methods for the detection of spatiotemporally contiguous extremes in remote-sensing data are applied here to satellite-derived atmospheric HCHO columns. BVOC emissions are shown to play a central role in the formation of the largest positive HCHO anomalies. Although vegetation stress can be captured by various remotely sensed quantities, spaceborne HCHO emerges as the most consistent recorder of vegetation responses to the largest climate extremes, especially in forested regions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9290652PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15880DOI Listing

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