Stefanski Artur, Butler Ethan E, Williams Laura J, Bermudez Raimundo, Guzmán Q J Antonio, Larson Andrew, Townsend Philip A, Montgomery Rebecca, Cavender-Bares Jeannine, Reich Peter B
Department of Forest Resources, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.
College of Natural Resources, University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, Stevens Point, Wisconsin, USA.
Ecology. 2025 May;106(5):e70048. doi: 10.1002/ecy.70048.
Anthropogenic climate change, particularly changes in temperature and precipitation, affects plants in multiple ways. Because plants respond dynamically to stress and acclimate to changes in growing conditions, diagnosing quantitative plant-environment relationships is a major challenge. One approach to this problem is to quantify leaf responses using spectral reflectance, which provides rapid, inexpensive, and nondestructive measurements that capture a wealth of information about genotype as well as phenotypic responses to the environment. However, it is unclear how warming and drought affect spectra. To address this gap, we used an open-air field experiment that manipulates temperature and rainfall in 36 plots at two sites in the boreal-temperate ecotone of northern Minnesota, USA. We collected leaf spectral reflectance (400-2400 nm) at the peak of the growing season for three consecutive years on juveniles (two to six years old) of five tree species planted within the experiment. We hypothesized that these mid-season measurements of spectral reflectance capture a snapshot of the leaf phenotype encompassing a suite of physiological, structural, and biochemical responses to both long- and short-time scale environmental conditions. We show that the imprint of environmental conditions experienced by plants hours to weeks before spectral measurements is linked to regions in the spectrum associated with stress, namely the water absorption regions of the near-infrared and short-wave infrared. In contrast, the environmental conditions plants experience during leaf development leave lasting imprints on the spectral profiles of leaves, attributable to leaf structure and chemistry (e.g., pigment content and associated ratios). Our analyses show that after accounting for baseline species spectral differences, spectral responses to the environment do not differ among the species. This suggests that building a general framework for understanding forest responses to climate change through spectral metrics may be possible, likely having broader implications if the common responses among species detected here represent a widespread phenomenon. Consequently, these results demonstrate that examining the entire spectrum of leaf reflectance for environmental imprints in contrast to single features (e.g., indices and traits) improves inferences about plant-environment relationships, which is particularly important in times of unprecedented climate change.
人为气候变化,尤其是温度和降水的变化,会以多种方式影响植物。由于植物会动态响应胁迫并适应生长条件的变化,因此诊断定量的植物 - 环境关系是一项重大挑战。解决这个问题的一种方法是使用光谱反射率来量化叶片响应,光谱反射率能提供快速、廉价且无损的测量,可获取有关基因型以及对环境的表型响应的大量信息。然而,尚不清楚变暖和干旱如何影响光谱。为了填补这一空白,我们在美国明尼苏达州北部寒温带过渡带的两个地点的36个样地中进行了一项露天田间试验,对温度和降雨量进行调控。我们连续三年在生长季高峰期收集了试验中种植的五种树种的幼树(两到六岁)的叶片光谱反射率(400 - 2400纳米)。我们假设,这些生长季中期的光谱反射率测量捕捉到了叶片表型的一个快照,其中包含了对长期和短期环境条件的一系列生理、结构和生化响应。我们表明,在光谱测量前数小时到数周内植物所经历的环境条件印记与光谱中与胁迫相关的区域有关,即近红外和短波红外的吸水区域。相比之下,植物在叶片发育过程中所经历的环境条件会在叶片的光谱特征上留下持久的印记,这归因于叶片结构和化学性质(例如色素含量及相关比例)。我们的分析表明,在考虑了物种光谱的基线差异后,不同物种对环境的光谱响应并无差异。这表明通过光谱指标建立一个理解森林对气候变化响应的通用框架可能是可行的,如果这里检测到的物种间共同响应代表一种普遍现象,可能会有更广泛的影响。因此,这些结果表明,与单一特征(例如指数和性状)相比,检查叶片反射率的整个光谱以获取环境印记能改进对植物 - 环境关系的推断,这在前所未有的气候变化时期尤为重要。