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Thermography to explore plant–environment interactions

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TLDR
This review presents and discusses the advantages of thermal imaging applications to plant science, agriculture, and ecology, as well as its limitations and possible approaches to minimize them, by highlighting examples from previous and ongoing research.
Abstract
Stomatal regulation is a key determinant of plant photosynthesis and water relations, influencing plant survival, adaptation, and growth. Stomata sense the surrounding environment and respond rapidly to abiotic and biotic stresses. Stomatal conductance to water vapour (g s) and/or transpiration (E) are therefore valuable physiological parameters to be monitored in plant and agricultural sciences. However, leaf gas exchange measurements involve contact with leaves and often interfere with leaf functioning. Besides, they are time consuming and are limited by the sampling characteristics (e.g. sample size and/or the high number of samples required). Remote and rapid means to assess g s or E are thus particularly valuable for physiologists, agronomists, and ecologists. Transpiration influences the leaf energy balance and, consequently, leaf temperature (T leaf). As a result, thermal imaging makes it possible to estimate or quantify g s and E. Thermal imaging has been successfully used in a wide range of conditions and with diverse plant species. The technique can be applied at different scales (e.g. from single seedlings/leaves through whole trees or field crops to regions), providing great potential to study plant-environment interactions and specific phenomena such as abnormal stomatal closure, genotypic variation in stress tolerance, and the impact of different management strategies on crop water status. Nevertheless, environmental variability (e.g. in light intensity, temperature, relative humidity, wind speed) affects the accuracy of thermal imaging measurements. This review presents and discusses the advantages of thermal imaging applications to plant science, agriculture, and ecology, as well as its limitations and possible approaches to minimize them, by highlighting examples from previous and ongoing research.

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References
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Understanding plant responses to drought — from genes to the whole plant

TL;DR: Attention is drawn to the perception and signalling processes (chemical and hydraulic) of water deficits, which are essential for a holistic understanding of plant resistance to stress, which is needed to improve crop management and breeding techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular mechanisms for heavy metal detoxification and tolerance

TL;DR: A broad overview of the evidence for an involvement of each mechanism in heavy metal detoxification and tolerance is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of stomata in sensing and driving environmental change.

TL;DR: Stomatal morphology, distribution and behaviour respond to a spectrum of signals, from intracellular signalling to global climatic change, which results from a web of control systems reminiscent of a ‘scale-free’ network, whose untangling requires integrated approaches beyond those currently used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Canopy temperature as a crop water stress indicator

TL;DR: In this paper, a crop water stress index (CWSI) was calculated using infrared thermometry, along with wet and dry-bulb air temperatures and an estimate of net radiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Applications of chlorophyll fluorescence can improve crop production strategies: an examination of future possibilities

TL;DR: The relationships between chlorophyll fluorescence parameters and leaf photosynthetic performance are reviewed in the context of applications of fluorescence measurements to screening programmes which seek to identify improved plant performance.
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