Authors
A Camilo Rey-Sánchez, Martijn Slot, Juan M Posada, Kaoru Kitajima
Publication date
2016/11/30
Journal
Climate Research
Volume
71
Issue
1
Pages
75-89
Description
Understanding leaf temperature (T leaf) variation in the canopy of tropical forests is critical for accurately calculating net primary productivity because plant respiration and net photosynthesis are highly sensitive to temperature. The objectives of this study were to (1) quantify the spatiotemporal variation of T leaf in a semi-deciduous tropical forest in Panama and (2) create a season-specific empirical model to predict T leaf in the canopy. To achieve this, we used a 42 m tall construction crane for canopy access and monitored the microenvironment within the canopy of mature, 20-35 m tall trees of 5 tropical tree species during the wet and the dry season. T leaf was correlated to photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) in the wet season but not in the dry season, possibly due to seasonal differences in wind speed, physiology, and canopy phenology. A structural equation model showed that T leaf is best explained by …
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