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From the Ground to Space: Using Solar‐Induced Chlorophyll Fluorescence to Estimate Crop Productivity

March 9, 2020

Liyin He, Troy Magney, Debsunder Dutta, Yi Yin, Philipp Kohler, Katja Grossmann, Jochen Stutz, Christian Dold, Jerry Hatfield, Kaiyu Guan, Bin Peng, Christian Frankenberg

Summary:

Crop monitoring is essential for ensuring food security, but reliable, instantaneous production estimates at the global scale are lacking. The monitoring of crop production in a changing climate is of paramount importance to sustainable food security. Accurate estimates of crop production are dependent on adequately quantifying crop photosynthesis. Our paper demonstrates that solar‐induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF), an emission of red to far‐red light from chlorophyll is highly correlated with crop photosynthesis. We show that a new high spatial resolution satellite SIF data set is highly correlated with crop productivity in the United States, which is benchmarked by the United States Department of Agriculture county‐level crop statistics. These results will improve the understanding of crop production and carbon flux over agricultural lands, as well as provide an accurate, large‐scale, and timely monitoring method for global crop production estimates.