Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments

Within-canopy variation in light results in profound canopy profiles in foliage structural, chemical and physiological traits. Studies on within-canopy variations in key foliage traits are often conducted in artificial environments, including growth chambers with only artificial light, and greenhous...

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Main Authors: Ülo eNiinemets, Trevor eKeenan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2012.00156/full
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spelling doaj-0fc35d18ed4743e6935a959006b7e7ab2020-11-24T23:56:46ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2012-07-01310.3389/fpls.2012.0015623016Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environmentsÜlo eNiinemets0Trevor eKeenan1Estonian University of Life SciencesHarvard UniversityWithin-canopy variation in light results in profound canopy profiles in foliage structural, chemical and physiological traits. Studies on within-canopy variations in key foliage traits are often conducted in artificial environments, including growth chambers with only artificial light, and greenhouses with and without supplemental light. Canopy patterns in these systems are considered to be representative to outdoor conditions, but in experiments with artificial and supplemental lighting, the intensity of artificial light strongly deceases with the distance from the light source, and natural light intensity in greenhouses is less than outdoors due to limited transmittance of enclosure walls. The implications of such changes in radiation conditions on canopy patterns of foliage traits have not yet been analyzed. We developed model-based methods for retrospective estimation of distance vs. light intensity relationships, for separation of the share of artificial and natural light in experiments with combined light and estimation of average enclosure transmittance, and estimated daily integrated light at the time of sampling (Qint,C), at foliage formation (Qint,G), and during foliage lifetime (Qint,av). The implications of artificial light environments were analyzed for altogether 25 studies providing information on within-canopy gradients of key foliage traits for 70 species x treatment combinations. In experiments with combined lighting, the share of natural light at the top of the plants varied three-fold, and the share of natural light strongly increased with increasing depth in the canopy. The study emphasizes that plant trait vs. light relationships in artificial systems are not directly comparable to natural environments unless modifications in lighting conditions in artificial environments are taken into account.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2012.00156/fullMeta-analysisplasticitydry mass per unit areagreenhouse transmittancegrowth chamberslighting in plant growth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ülo eNiinemets
Trevor eKeenan
spellingShingle Ülo eNiinemets
Trevor eKeenan
Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
Frontiers in Plant Science
Meta-analysis
plasticity
dry mass per unit area
greenhouse transmittance
growth chambers
lighting in plant growth
author_facet Ülo eNiinemets
Trevor eKeenan
author_sort Ülo eNiinemets
title Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
title_short Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
title_full Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
title_fullStr Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
title_full_unstemmed Measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
title_sort measures of light in studies on light-driven plant plasticity in artificial environments
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2012-07-01
description Within-canopy variation in light results in profound canopy profiles in foliage structural, chemical and physiological traits. Studies on within-canopy variations in key foliage traits are often conducted in artificial environments, including growth chambers with only artificial light, and greenhouses with and without supplemental light. Canopy patterns in these systems are considered to be representative to outdoor conditions, but in experiments with artificial and supplemental lighting, the intensity of artificial light strongly deceases with the distance from the light source, and natural light intensity in greenhouses is less than outdoors due to limited transmittance of enclosure walls. The implications of such changes in radiation conditions on canopy patterns of foliage traits have not yet been analyzed. We developed model-based methods for retrospective estimation of distance vs. light intensity relationships, for separation of the share of artificial and natural light in experiments with combined light and estimation of average enclosure transmittance, and estimated daily integrated light at the time of sampling (Qint,C), at foliage formation (Qint,G), and during foliage lifetime (Qint,av). The implications of artificial light environments were analyzed for altogether 25 studies providing information on within-canopy gradients of key foliage traits for 70 species x treatment combinations. In experiments with combined lighting, the share of natural light at the top of the plants varied three-fold, and the share of natural light strongly increased with increasing depth in the canopy. The study emphasizes that plant trait vs. light relationships in artificial systems are not directly comparable to natural environments unless modifications in lighting conditions in artificial environments are taken into account.
topic Meta-analysis
plasticity
dry mass per unit area
greenhouse transmittance
growth chambers
lighting in plant growth
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2012.00156/full
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AT trevorekeenan measuresoflightinstudiesonlightdrivenplantplasticityinartificialenvironments
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