Affiliation:
1. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research Centre The University of British Columbia Vancouver BC V6T 1Z4 Canada
Abstract
Summary
We present the Fast Assimilation‐Temperature Response (FAsTeR) method, a new method for measuring plant assimilation‐temperature (AT) response that reduces measurement time and increases data density compared with conventional methods.
The FAsTeR method subjects plant leaves to a linearly increasing temperature ramp while taking rapid, nonequilibrium measurements of gas exchange variables. Two postprocessing steps are employed to correct measured assimilation rates for nonequilibrium effects and sensor calibration drift. Results obtained with the new method are compared with those from two conventional stepwise methods.
Our new method accurately reproduces results obtained from conventional methods, reduces measurement time by a factor of c. 3.3 (from c. 90 to 27 min), and increases data density by a factor of c. 55 (from c. 10 to c. 550 observations). Simulation results demonstrate that increased data density substantially improves confidence in parameter estimates and drastically reduces the influence of noise.
By improving measurement speed and data density, the FAsTeR method enables users to ask fundamentally new kinds of ecological and physiological questions, expediting data collection in short‐field campaigns, and improving the representativeness of data across species in the literature.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Cited by
2 articles.
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