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Registro Completo |
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
Data corrente: |
06/02/2018 |
Data da última atualização: |
02/05/2018 |
Tipo da produção científica: |
Artigo em Periódico Indexado |
Autoria: |
WU, J.; KOBAYASHI, H.; STARK, S. C.; MENG, R.; GUAN, K.; TRAN, N. N.; GAO, S.; YANG, W.; RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; MIURA, T.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; ROGERS, A.; DYE, D. G.; NELSON, B. W.; SERBIN, S. P.; HUETE, A. R.; SALESKA, S. R. |
Afiliação: |
Jin Wu, University of Arizona / Brookhaven National Laboratory; Hideki Kobayashi, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology; Scott C. Stark, Michigan State University; Ran Meng, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Kaiyu Guan, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign; Ngoc Nguyen Tran, University of Technology Sydney; Sicong Gao, University of Technology Sydney; Wei Yang, Chiba University; Natalia Restrepo-Coupe, University of Arizona; Tomoaki Miura, University of Havaii; RAIMUNDO COSME DE OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, CPATU; Alistair Rogers, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Dennis G. Dye, Northern Arizona University; Bruce W. Nelson, INPA; Shawn P. Serbin, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Alfredo R. Huete, University of Technology Sydney; Scott R. Saleska, University of Arizona. |
Título: |
Biological processes dominate seasonality of remotely sensed canopy greenness in an Amazon evergreen forest. |
Ano de publicação: |
2018 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
New Phytologist, v. 217, n. 4, p. 1507-1520, Mar. 2018. |
DOI: |
10.1111/nph.14939 |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Conteúdo: |
Satellite observations of Amazon forests show seasonal and interannual variations, but the underlying biological processes remain debated. Here we combined radiative transfer models (RTMs) with field observations of Amazon forest leaf and canopy characteristics to test three hypotheses for satellite-observed canopy reflectance seasonality: seasonal changes in leaf area index, in canopy-surface leafless crown fraction and/or in leaf demography. Canopy RTMs (PROSAIL and FLiES), driven by these three factors combined, simulated satellite-observed seasonal patterns well, explaining c. 70% of the variability in a key reflectance-based vegetation index (MAIAC EVI, which removes artifacts that would otherwise arise from clouds/aerosols and sun?sensor geometry). Leaf area index, leafless crown fraction and leaf demography independently accounted for 1, 33 and 66% of FLiES-simulated EVI seasonality, respectively. These factors also strongly influenced modeled near-infrared (NIR) reflectance, explaining why both modeled and observed EVI, which is especially sensitive to NIR, captures canopy seasonal dynamics well. Our improved analysis of canopy-scale biophysics rules out satellite artifacts as significant causes of satellite-observed seasonal patterns at this site, implying that aggregated phenology explains the larger scale remotely observed patterns. This work significantly reconciles current controversies about satellite-detected Amazon phenology, and improves our use of satellite observations to study climate?phenology relationships in the tropics. MenosSatellite observations of Amazon forests show seasonal and interannual variations, but the underlying biological processes remain debated. Here we combined radiative transfer models (RTMs) with field observations of Amazon forest leaf and canopy characteristics to test three hypotheses for satellite-observed canopy reflectance seasonality: seasonal changes in leaf area index, in canopy-surface leafless crown fraction and/or in leaf demography. Canopy RTMs (PROSAIL and FLiES), driven by these three factors combined, simulated satellite-observed seasonal patterns well, explaining c. 70% of the variability in a key reflectance-based vegetation index (MAIAC EVI, which removes artifacts that would otherwise arise from clouds/aerosols and sun?sensor geometry). Leaf area index, leafless crown fraction and leaf demography independently accounted for 1, 33 and 66% of FLiES-simulated EVI seasonality, respectively. These factors also strongly influenced modeled near-infrared (NIR) reflectance, explaining why both modeled and observed EVI, which is especially sensitive to NIR, captures canopy seasonal dynamics well. Our improved analysis of canopy-scale biophysics rules out satellite artifacts as significant causes of satellite-observed seasonal patterns at this site, implying that aggregated phenology explains the larger scale remotely observed patterns. This work significantly reconciles current controversies about satellite-detected Amazon phenology, and improves our use of satellite... Mostrar Tudo |
Palavras-Chave: |
Sazonalidade. |
Thesagro: |
Fenologia; Floresta tropical. |
Categoria do assunto: |
P Recursos Naturais, Ciências Ambientais e da Terra |
Marc: |
LEADER 02563naa a2200361 a 4500 001 2087194 005 2018-05-02 008 2018 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 024 7 $a10.1111/nph.14939$2DOI 100 1 $aWU, J. 245 $aBiological processes dominate seasonality of remotely sensed canopy greenness in an Amazon evergreen forest.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2018 520 $aSatellite observations of Amazon forests show seasonal and interannual variations, but the underlying biological processes remain debated. Here we combined radiative transfer models (RTMs) with field observations of Amazon forest leaf and canopy characteristics to test three hypotheses for satellite-observed canopy reflectance seasonality: seasonal changes in leaf area index, in canopy-surface leafless crown fraction and/or in leaf demography. Canopy RTMs (PROSAIL and FLiES), driven by these three factors combined, simulated satellite-observed seasonal patterns well, explaining c. 70% of the variability in a key reflectance-based vegetation index (MAIAC EVI, which removes artifacts that would otherwise arise from clouds/aerosols and sun?sensor geometry). Leaf area index, leafless crown fraction and leaf demography independently accounted for 1, 33 and 66% of FLiES-simulated EVI seasonality, respectively. These factors also strongly influenced modeled near-infrared (NIR) reflectance, explaining why both modeled and observed EVI, which is especially sensitive to NIR, captures canopy seasonal dynamics well. Our improved analysis of canopy-scale biophysics rules out satellite artifacts as significant causes of satellite-observed seasonal patterns at this site, implying that aggregated phenology explains the larger scale remotely observed patterns. This work significantly reconciles current controversies about satellite-detected Amazon phenology, and improves our use of satellite observations to study climate?phenology relationships in the tropics. 650 $aFenologia 650 $aFloresta tropical 653 $aSazonalidade 700 1 $aKOBAYASHI, H. 700 1 $aSTARK, S. C. 700 1 $aMENG, R. 700 1 $aGUAN, K. 700 1 $aTRAN, N. N. 700 1 $aGAO, S. 700 1 $aYANG, W. 700 1 $aRESTREPO-COUPE, N. 700 1 $aMIURA, T. 700 1 $aOLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de 700 1 $aROGERS, A. 700 1 $aDYE, D. G. 700 1 $aNELSON, B. W. 700 1 $aSERBIN, S. P. 700 1 $aHUETE, A. R. 700 1 $aSALESKA, S. R. 773 $tNew Phytologist$gv. 217, n. 4, p. 1507-1520, Mar. 2018.
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Registro original: |
Embrapa Amazônia Oriental (CPATU) |
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Registros recuperados : 49 | |
4. | | HAREN, J. van; SALESKA, S.; HUETE, A.; KELLER, M.; OLIVEIRA, R. C. Amazon forest tree species composition influences soil fluxes of CO2 and N2O. In: SCIENCE TEAM MEETING, 10., 2006, Brasília, DF. Book of Abstracts... Manaus: LBA-ECO, 2006. p. 19.Tipo: Resumo em Anais de Congresso |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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5. | | SALESKA, S. R.; WU, J.; GUAN, K.; ARAUJO, A. C.; HUETE, A.; NOBRE, A. D.; RESTREPO-COUPE, N. Dry-season greening of Amazon forests. Nature, v. 531, n. 7594, p. E4-E5, Mar. 2016.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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6. | | GRANT, R. F.; HUTYRA, L. R.; OLIVEIRA, R. C.; MUNGER, J. W.; SALESKA, S. R.; WOFSY, S. C. Modeling the carbon balance of Amazonian rain forests: resolving ecological controls on net ecosystem productivity. Ecological Monographs, v. 79, n. 3, p. 445-463, Aug. 2009.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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8. | | VAN HAREN, J.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; BELDINI, P. T.; CAMARGO, P. B.; KELLER, M.; SALESKA, S. Tree species effects on soil properties and greenhouse gas fluxes in East-central Amazonia: comparison between Monoculture and Diverse Forest. Biotropica, v. 45, n. 6, p. 709-718, 2013. Artigo publicado por Pesquisador Visitante da Embrapa Monitoramento por Satélite.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental; Embrapa Territorial. |
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9. | | WU, J.; ALBERT, L. P.; PROHASKA, N.; ELY, K.; WOLFE, B. T.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; SALESKA, S. R.; ROGERS, A.; SERBIN, S. P. A convergent spectroscopy-based approach for Vcmax across leaf age and growth environments. In: ESA ANNUAL MEETING, 2017, Portland. [Abstracts]. Washington, DC: Ecological Society of America, 2017. Abstract OOS 2-2.Tipo: Resumo em Anais de Congresso |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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10. | | SALESKA, S.; RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; CAMPOS, K. S.; ALVES, L.; IVANOV, V.; LONGO, M.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; SILVA, R.; SMITH, M.; TAPAJOS, R.; TAYLOR, T. Do local-scale climate tipping points exist in Amazon forests, and can they warn of impending basin-scale tipping point vulnerability? In: EGU GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 2024, Vienna, Austria. EGU24-14707. Abstract. [S.l.]: EGU, 2024.Tipo: Resumo em Anais de Congresso |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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11. | | STARK, S. C.; ENQUIST, B. J.; SALESKA, S. R.; LEITOLD, V.; SCHIETTI, J.; LONGO, M.; ALVES, L. F.; CAMARGO, P. B.; OLIVEIRA, R. C. Linking canopy leaf area and light environments with tree size distributions to explain Amazon forest demography. Ecology Letters, v. 18, n. 7, p. 636-645, July 2015.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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12. | | WOFSY, S.; HAYEK, M.; SALESKA, S.; LONGO, M.; MOORCROFT, P.; MUNGER, J.; RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; WIEDEMANN, K.; SILVA, R. da; CAMARGO, P.; COSME, R.; ALVES, L. Response of Amazonian tropical forests to short- and long-term climatic variations. In: AGU FALL MEETING, 2014, San Francisco. [Proceedings]. [San Francisco]: AGU, 2014.Tipo: Resumo em Anais de Congresso |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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13. | | HAREN, J. L. M. van; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; HUTYRA, L.; CAMARGO, P. B. de; KELLER, M.; SALESKA, S. R. Do plant species influence soil CO2 and N2O fluxes in a diverse tropical forest? Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 115, G03010, 2010.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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14. | | HUNTER, M. O.; KELLE, M.; MORTON, D.; COOK, B.; LEFSKY, M.; DUCEY, M.; SALESKA, S.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; SCHIETTI, J. Structural dynamics of tropical moist forest gaps. Plos One, v. 10, n.7, p. 1-19, jul. 2015.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental; Embrapa Territorial. |
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15. | | NELSON, B.; TAVARES, J.; WU, J.; VALERIANO, D.; LOPES, A.; MAROSTICA, S.; MARTINS, G.; PROHASKA, N.; ALBERT, L.; ARAUJO, A. de; MANZI, A.; SALESKA, S.; HUETE, A. Seasonality of Central Amazon Forest Leaf Flush Using Tower-Mounted RGB Camera. In: AGU FALL MEETING, 2014, San Francisco. [Proceedings]. [San Francisco]: AGU, 2014.Tipo: Resumo em Anais de Congresso |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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16. | | IVANOV, V. Y.; HUTYRA, L. R.; WOFSY, S.; MUNGER, J. W.; SALESKA, S. R.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; CAMARGO, P. B. de. Root niche separation can explain avoidance of seasonal drought stress and vulnerability of overstory trees to extended drought in a mature Amazonian forest. Water Resources Research, v. 48, n. 12, p. 1-21, Dec. 2012.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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17. | | RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; CHRISTOFFERSEN, B. O.; LONGO, M.; ALVES, L. F.; CAMPOS, K. S.; ARAUJO, A. C. de; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; PROHASKA, N.; SILVA, R. da; TAPAJOS, R.; WIEDEMANN, K. T.; WOFSY, S. C.; SALESKA, S. R. Asymmetric response of Amazon forest water and energy fluxes to wet and dry hydrological extremes reveals onset of a local drought-induced tipping point. Global Change Biology, v. 29, n. 21, p. 6077-6092, Nov. 2023.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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18. | | WU, J.; CHAVANA-BRYANT, C.; PROHASKA, N.; SERBIN, S. P.; GUAN, K.; ALBERT, L. P.; YANG, X.; LEEUWEN, W. J. D. van; GARNELLO, A. J.; MARTINS, G.; MALHI, Y.; GERARD, F.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; SALESKA, S. R. Convergence in relationships between leaf traits, spectra and age across diverse canopy environments and two contrasting tropical forests. New Phytologist, v. 214, n. 3, p. 1033-1048, May 2017.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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19. | | MALHI, Y.; MELACK, J.; GATTI, L. V.; OMETTO, J.; KESSELMEIER, J.; WOLFF, S.; ARAGÃO, L. E. O.; COSTA, M.; SALESKA, S.; PANGALA, S. R.; BASSO, L. S.; RIZZO, L.; ARAUJO, A. C. de; RESTREPO-COUPE, N. Biogeochemical cycles of the Amazon. In: SCIENCE panel for the Amazon: Amazon assessment report 2021: part I: The Amazon as a regional entity of the Earth system. New York, NY: United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network, 2021. Cap. 6, pag. irregular.Tipo: Capítulo em Livro Técnico-Científico |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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20. | | SMITH, M. N.; TAYLOR, T. C.; HAREN, J. van; ROSOLEM, R.; RESTREPO-COUPE, N.; ADAMS, J.; WU, J.; OLIVEIRA JUNIOR, R. C. de; SILVA, R. da; ARAUJO, A. C. de; CAMARGO, P. B. de; HUXMAN, T. E.; SALESKA, S. R. Empirical evidence for resilience of tropical forest photosynthesis in a warmer world. Nature Plants, v. 6, p. 1225-1230, 2020.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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Registros recuperados : 49 | |
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Nenhum registro encontrado para a expressão de busca informada. |
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