In a field in western Kentucky, a machine sprays cover crops to prepare for planting season. NASA scientists are looking to space-based tools to help forecast fast, stealthy droughts responsible for severe agricultural losses in recent years. U.S. Department of Agriculture/Justin Pius
An unusual boost in plant productivity can foreshadow severe soil water
loss. NASA satellites are following the clues.
Flaring up rapidly and with little
warning, the drought that gripped much of the United States in the summer of
2012 was one of the most extensive the country had seen since the yearslong
Dust Bowl of the 1930s. The “flash drought,” stoked by extreme heat that baked
the moisture from soil and plants, led to widespread crop failure and economic
losses costing more than $30 billion.
While archetypal droughts may
develop over seasons, flash droughts are marked by rapid drying. They can take
hold within weeks and are tough to predict. In a recent study, a team led by scientists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California was able to detect signs of flash droughts up
to three months before onset. In the future, such advance notice could aid
mitigation efforts.
How did they do it? By following
the glow.
A Signal Seen
From Space
During photosynthesis, when a plant absorbs sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into food, its chlorophyll will “leak” some unused photons. This faint glow is called solar-induced fluorescence, or SIF. The stronger the fluorescence, the more carbon dioxide a plant is taking from the atmosphere to power its growth.
Growing plants emit a form of light detectable by NASA satellites orbiting hundreds of miles above Earth. Parts of North America appear to glimmer in this visualization, depicting an average year. Gray indicates regions with little or no fluorescence; red, pink, and white indicate high fluorescence. NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
While the glow is invisible to the naked eye, it can be detected by
instruments aboard satellites such as NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Obsevatory-2 (OCO-2). Launched in 2014, OCO-2 has observed the U.S.
Midwest aglow during the growing season.
The researchers compared years of
fluorescence data to an inventory of flash droughts that struck the U.S.
between May and July from 2015 to 2020. They found a domino effect: In the
weeks and months leading up to a flash drought, vegetation initially thrived as
conditions turned warm and dry. The flourishing plants emitted an unusually
strong fluorescence signal for the time of year.
But by gradually drawing down the
water supply in the soil, the plants created a risk. When extreme temperatures
hit, the already low moisture levels plummeted, and flash drought developed
within days.
The team correlated the
fluorescence measurements with moisture data from NASA’s SMAP satellite. Short for Soil Moisture Active
Passive, SMAP tracks changes in soil water by measuring the intensity of
natural microwave emissions from Earth’s surface.
The scientists found that the
unusual fluorescence pattern correlated extremely well with soil moisture
losses in the six to 12 weeks before a flash drought. A consistent pattern
emerged across diverse landscapes, from the temperate forests of the Eastern
U.S. to the Great Plains and Western shrublands.
For this reason, plant fluorescence
“shows promise as a reliable early warning indicator of flash drought with
enough lead time to take action,” said Nicholas Parazoo, an Earth scientist at
JPL and lead author of the recent study.
Jordan Gerth, a scientist with the
National Weather Service Office of Observations who was not involved in the
study, said he was pleased to see work on flash droughts, given our changing
climate. He noted that agriculture benefits from predictability whenever
possible.
While early warning can’t eliminate
the impacts of flash droughts, Gerth said, “farmers and ranchers with advanced
operations can better use water for irrigation to reduce crop impacts, avoid
planting crops that are likely to fail, or plant a different type of crop to
achieve the most ideal yield if they have weeks to months of lead time.”
Tracking
Carbon Emissions
In addition to trying to predict
flash droughts, the scientists wanted to understand how these impact carbon
emissions.
By converting carbon dioxide into
food during photosynthesis, plants and trees are carbon “sinks,” absorbing more
CO2 from the atmosphere than they release. Many kinds of ecosystems, including
farmlands, play a role in the carbon cycle — the constant exchange of carbon atoms between the land, atmosphere,
and ocean.
The scientists used carbon dioxide
measurements from the OCO-2 satellite, along with advanced computer models, to
track carbon uptake by vegetation before and after flash droughts.
Heat-stressed plants absorb less CO2 from the atmosphere, so the researchers
expected to find more free carbon. What they found instead was a balancing act.
Warm temperatures prior to the
onset of flash drought tempted plants to increase their carbon uptake compared
to normal conditions. This anomalous uptake was, on average, sufficient to
fully offset decreases in carbon uptake due to the hot conditions that ensued.
The surprising finding could help improve carbon cycle model predictions.
Celebrating its 10th year in orbit
this summer, the OCO-2 satellite maps natural and human-made carbon dioxide concentrations and vegetation fluorescence using three camera-like spectrometers tuned to
detect the unique light signature of CO2. They measure the gas indirectly by
tracking how much reflected sunlight it absorbs in a given column of air.
The OCO-2 project and SMAP are managed by JPL. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. To read more about them, go to: https://ocov2.jpl.nasa.gov/ and https://smap.jpl.nasa.gov
Source: How ‘Glowing’ Plants Could Help Scientists Predict Flash Drought - NASA
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