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Satellites help scientists see forests for the trees amid climate change

Scientists have found a way to use satellites to track photosynthesis in evergreens鈥攁 discovery that could improve our ability to assess the health of northern forests amid climate change.

An international team of researchers used satellite sensor data to identify slight colour shifts in evergreen trees that show seasonal cycles of photosynthesis鈥攖he process in which plants use sunlight to convert and water into glucose.

Photosynthesis is easy to track in deciduous trees鈥攚hen leaves bud or turn yellow and fall off. But until recently, it had been impossible to detect in evergreen conifers on a large scale.

"Photosynthesis is arguably the most important process on the planet, without which life as we know it would not exist," said John Gamon, lead researcher and a professor of biological sciences at the University of Alberta. "As the climate changes, plants respond鈥攖heir photosynthesis changes, their growing season changes. And if photosynthesis changes, that in turn further affects the atmosphere and climate."

Through their CO2-consuming ways, plants have been slowing climate change far more than scientists previously realized. The "million-dollar question" is whether this will continue as the planet continues to warm due to human activity, Gamon said.

Scientists have two hypotheses鈥攖he first is that climate change and longer growing seasons will result in plants sucking up even more CO2, further slowing climate change. The other predicts a drop in photosynthetic activity due to drought conditions that stress plants, causing them to release CO2 into the atmosphere through a process called respiration鈥攖hereby accelerating climate change.

"If it's hypothesis one, that's helping us. If it's hypothesis two, that's pretty scary," said Gamon.

The research team combined two different satellite bands鈥攐ne of which was used to study oceans and only recently made public by NASA鈥攖o track seasonal changes in green (pigment created by chlorophyll) and yellow (created by carotenoid) needle colour. The index they developed provides a new tool to monitor changes in northern forests, which cover 14 per cent of all the land on Earth.

Gamon has taken a leave of absence from the U of A to further the research, now funded by NASA, at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. His lab in the U.S. is reviewing 15 years' worth of satellite data on forests in Canada and Alaska to ultimately determine whether photosynthetic cycles are happening earlier because of and whether forests are becoming more or less productive at converting CO2.

"Those are key questions we haven't been able to answer for the boreal forest as a whole," he said.

The findings were published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

More information: Exposing the secret life of evergreen conifers: Hidden photosynthetic phenology revealed by remote sensing, PNAS,

Provided by University of Alberta

Citation: Satellites help scientists see forests for the trees amid climate change (2016, October 31) retrieved 12 July 2025 from /news/2016-10-satellites-scientists-forests-trees-climate.html
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