Leaf Optical Properties
Plant leaves collectively represent the largest above-ground surface area of plant material in virtually all environments. Their optical properties determine where and how energy and gas exchange occurs, which in turn drives the energy budget of the planet, and defines its ecology and habitability. This book reviews the state-of-the-art research on leaf optics. Topics covered include leaf traits, the anatomy and structure of leaves, leaf colour, biophysics and spectroscopy, radiometry, radiative transfer models, and remote and proximal sensing. A physical approach is emphasised throughout, providing the necessary foundations in physics, chemistry and biology to make the context accessible to readers from various subject backgrounds. It is a valuable resource for advanced students, researchers and government agency practitioners in remote sensing, plant physiology, ecology, resource management and conservation.
- Compiling more than 3000 articles, this is an invaluable reference for students and researchers
- Supported by an online bibliographical database set up by Stéphane Jacquemoud, which includes references to articles, book sections and reports related to the topic of leaf optical properties
- Provides a comprehensive review of the physical processes and interactions in leaves
Reviews & endorsements
'This advanced book considers the optical properties of leaves from many perspectives, including biophysical, biochemical, molecular, physiological, and ecological. Author Jacquemoud (Univ. of Paris) is a professor of remote sensing and a physicist, while Ustin (Univ. of California Davis) is a professor of environmental resource science. Together they bring considerable expertise to this endeavor … This work will appeal to advanced students and researchers in plant physiology, as well as students and practitioners of remote sensing.' J. Z. Kiss, Choice
'If you are a plant ecologist, horticulturalist, plant anatomist, plant physiologist, plant developmental biologist, plant evolutionist, plant cell biologist, plant pathologist, biophysicist, biochemist, biosynthetic plant engineer, someone who does remote sensing, a historian of science, or someone interested in feeding the world, stop reading this review and buy this book. The authors write so that readers specialized in any one discipline will understand the material presented in all other disciplines.' Randy Wayne, The Quarterly Review of Biology
Product details
August 2019Adobe eBook Reader
9781108618335
0 pages
329 b/w illus. 68 tables
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. A brief history of leaf colour
- 2. Leaf biophysics
- 3. Spectroscopy of leaf molecules
- 4. Measurement of leaf optical properties
- 5. Leaf optical properties in different wavelength domains
- 6. Variation due to leaf structural, chemical and physiological traits
- 7. Variation due to leaf abiotic and biotic factors
- 8. Comprehensive reviews of leaf optical properties models
- 9. Modeling leaf optical properties: prospect
- 10. Modeling three-dimensional leaf optical properties: raytran
- 11. Extraction of leaf traits
- 12. Applications
- Conclusion
- References
- Index.