研究目的
To gain a more mechanistic understanding of which environmental factors drive changes in PRI during late-season phenological transitions at the FTE, including factors susceptible to climate change and those that are not.
研究成果
Photoperiod had the strongest, significant effect on late-season changes in PRI, but environmental variables susceptible to climate change were also significant. These results suggest that interpreting PRI time-series of late-season phenological transitions may indeed facilitate our understanding of how northern treeline responds to climate change.
研究不足
The observational time-scale spans only two-years, whereas the effects of climate change act on a much longer temporal scale, potentially affecting the complex interaction between environmental and genetic factors. The study focuses on late-season phenology, but to fully determine the suitability of PRI time-series for climate change research along the FTE, future work needs to evaluate how environmental factors drive changes in PRI during springtime.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
Ground-based, time-series of PRI were acquired from individual trees in combination with meteorological variables and photoperiod information at six FTE sites in Alaska. A linear mixed-effects modeling approach was used to determine the significance and effect size of environmental factors on late-seasonal changes in the PRI signal.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Six study plots were established along a transect across the FTE near the Dalton Highway, Alaska, USA, each with six study trees.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Rugged spectral reflectance sensors (SRS, METER, Pullman, WA), meteorological monitoring sensor (VP-4, METER, Pullman, WA), rugged temperature sensor (RT-1, METER, Pullman, WA), digital camera (CoolPix 4500, Nikon Corporation, Tokyo Japan) equipped with a fisheye lens, visible spectrophotometer (Go Direct SpectroVis Plus Spectrophotometer, Vernier, OR, USA).
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Canopy reflectance measurements centered at 532 and 570 nm were collected at each tree location in 5-minute sampling intervals. From the SRS-provided spectral measurements, a mean PRI was calculated for each day at constant solar zenith angle.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
A linear mixed effects analysis was performed with PRI0 as the dependent variable, environmental variables and year as fixed effects, and tree and plot identification number as nested random effects.
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