MONITORING WATER POTENTIAL AND RELATIVE WATER CONTENT IN <em>EUCALYPTUS</em> <em>CAMALDULENSIS</em> USING NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY

Authors

  • WH Lu
  • GL Yang
  • Y Lin
  • JZ Luo
  • CB Wang
  • R Meder
  • P Warburton
  • RJ Arnold

Keywords:

Physiology, portable NIR, non-destructive assessment

Abstract

A genetically diverse cohort of Eucalyptus camaldulensis seedlings were grown under a range of irrigation treatments to impose a range of states of water stress. Near infrared (NIR) spectra obtained from leaf surfaces of these seedlings were calibrated against physiological measurements commonly associated with plant water stress, i.e. relative water content and midday leaf water potential. Spectral data were obtained from upper (adaxial) leaf surfaces of upper and lower leaves on the stem. A strong coefficient of determination of R2P = 0.78 was obtained for the validation set using the calibration developed for midday leaf water potential from the seedling leaf data. However, that for relative water content was relatively low: R2P = 0.41. These results indicated that portable NIR has the potential to provide for rapid, non-destructive assessment of the leaf water potential in E. camaldulensis seedlings.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2017-01-25

How to Cite

WH Lu, GL Yang, Y Lin, JZ Luo, CB Wang, R Meder, P Warburton, & RJ Arnold. (2017). MONITORING WATER POTENTIAL AND RELATIVE WATER CONTENT IN <em>EUCALYPTUS</em> <em>CAMALDULENSIS</em> USING NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY. Journal of Tropical Forest Science (JTFS), 29(1), 121–128. Retrieved from https://jtfs.frim.gov.my/jtfs/article/view/430

Issue

Section

Articles
Bookmark and Share