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'''Leaf Area Index (LAI)''' is a [[dimensionless quantity]] that characterizes plant [[Canopy (forest)|canopies]]. It is defined as the one-sided green leaf area per unit ground surface area (''LAI = leaf area / ground area, m<sup>2</sup> / m<sup>2</sup>'') in [[broadleaf]] [[Canopy (forest)|canopies]].<ref>Watson, D.J., 1947. Comparative physiological studies on the growth of field crops: I. Variation in net assimilation rate and leaf area between species and varieties and within and between years. Annals of Botany, 11: 41-76.</ref>  In [[conifers]], three different definitions for LAI have been used:
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*Half of the total needle surface area per unit ground surface area <ref>Chen, J.M., and Black, T.A. (1992): Defining leaf area index for non-flat leaves. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 57: 1–12</ref>
*Projected (or one-sided, in accordance the definition for broadleaf canopies) needle area per unit ground area
*Total needle surface area per unit ground area {{Citation needed|date=March 2013}}
LAI ranges from 0 (bare ground) to over 10 (dense conifer forests){{Citation needed|date=March 2013}}.
 
== Interpretation and application of LAI ==
[[Image:LAI Respiration.gif|thumb|right]]
LAI is used to predict photosynthetic [[primary production]], evapotranspiration and as a reference tool for [[crop]] growth. As such, LAI plays an essential role in [[theoretical production ecology]]. An inverse exponential relation between LAI and light interception, which is linearly proportional to the primary production rate, has been established:{{Citation needed|date=November 2007}}
 
:<math>P=P_\max \left(1-e^{-c\cdot LAI}\right)</math>
 
where ''P''<sub>max</sub> designates the maximum [[primary production]] and <math>c</math> designates a crop-specific growth [[coefficient]]. This inverse exponential function is called the '''primary production function'''.
 
== Determining LAI ==
LAI can be determined directly by taking a [[statistically significant]] [[sample (statistics)|sample]] of foliage from a [[Canopy (ecology)|plant canopy]], measuring the leaf area per sample plot and dividing it by the plot land surface area. Indirect methods measure canopy geometry or light extinction and relate it to LAI.<ref>[http://jxb.oxfordjournals.org/content/54/392/2403.full Breda, N, (2003). Ground-based measurements of leaf area index: A review of methods, instruments and current controversies. Journal of Experimental Botany, 54, 2403–2417]</ref>
 
===Direct methods===
Direct methods can be easily applied on [[deciduous]] species by collecting leaves during leaf fall in traps of certain area distributed below the canopy. The area of the collected leaves can be measured using a leaf area meter or an [[image scanner]] and image analysis software. The measured leaf area can then be divided by the area of the traps to obtain LAI. Alternatively, leaf area can be measured on a sub-sample of the collected leaves and linked to the leaf dry mass (e.g. via [[Specific leaf area|Specific Leaf Area]], SLA cm<sup>2</sup>/g). That way it is not necessary to measure the area of all leaves one by one, but weigh the collected leaves after drying (at 60–80 °C for 48 h). Leaf dry mass multiplied by the [[specific leaf area]] is converted into leaf area.<br />
Direct methods in [[evergreen]] species are necessarily destructive. However, they are widely used in crops and pastures by harvesting the vegetation and measuring leaf area within a certain ground surface area. It is very difficult (and also unethical) to apply such destructive techniques in natural ecosystems, particularly in forests of [[evergreen]] tree species. Foresters have developed techniques that determine leaf area in [[evergreen]] forests through [[Tree allometry|allometric]] relationships.<br />
Due to the difficulties and the limitations of the direct methods for estimating LAI, they are mostly used as reference for indirect methods that are easier and faster to apply.
 
===Indirect methods===
[[File:Hemiphoto monarch habitat1.jpg|thumb|A [[Hemispherical photography|hemispherical photograph]] of [[Canopy (forest)|forest canopy]]. The ratio of the area of canopy to [[sky]] is used to approximate LAI.]]
Indirect methods of estimating LAI ''in situ'' can be divided in two categories: (1) indirect contact LAI measurements such
as plumb lines and inclined point quadrats{{Citation needed|date=November 2007}}<!-- (Gower et al., 1999; Scurlock et al., 2001;
Jonckheere et al., 2004a) -->; and (2) indirect non-contact measurements. Due to the subjectivity and labor involved with the first method, indirect non-contact measurements are typically preferred. Non-contact LAI tools, such as [[hemispherical photography]],  Hemiview Plant Canopy Analyser from Delta-T Devices, the CI-110 Plant Canopy Analyzer [http://www.cid-inc.com/ci-110.php] from [[CID Bio-Science]], LAI-2200 Plant Canopy Analyzer [http://www.licor.com/env/products/area_meters/LAI-2200/] from [[LI-COR Biosciences]] and the [http://www.decagon.com/products/instruments/ceptometer-par-lai-instruments-2/accupar-lp-80/ LP-80 LAI ceptometer] [http://www.decagon.com/ag_research/canopy/lp80.php] from [[Decagon Devices]], measure LAI in a non-destructive way. [[Hemispherical photography]] methods estimate LAI and other canopy structure attributes from analyzing upward-looking [[fisheye]] photographs taken beneath the plant canopy. The LAI-2200 calculates LAI and other canopy structure attributes from solar radiation measurements made with a wide-angle optical sensor. Measurements made above and below the canopy are used to determine canopy light interception at five angles, from which LAI is computed using a model of radiative transfer in vegetative canopies. The LP-80 calculates LAI by means of measuring the difference between light levels above the canopy and at ground level, and factoring in the leaf angle distribution, solar zenith angle, and plant extinction coefficient. Such indirect methods, where LAI is calculated based upon observations of other variables (canopy geometry, light interception, leaf length and width,<ref>{{cite journal |last=Blanco |first=F.F. |coauthors=Folegatti, M.V. |year=2003 |title=A new method for estimating the leaf area index of cucumber and tomato plants |journal=Horticultura Brasileira |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=666–669 |doi=10.1590/S0102-05362003000400019 }}</ref> etc.) are generally faster, amenable to automation, and thereby allow for a larger number of spatial samples to be obtained. For reasons of convenience when compared to the direct (destructive) methods, these tools are becoming more and more important.
 
===Disadvantages of methods===
The disadvantage of the direct method is that it is destructive, time consuming and expensive, especially if the study area is very large.
 
The disadvantage of the indirect method is that in some cases it can underestimate the value of LAI in very dense canopies, as it does not account for leaves that lie on each other, and essentially act as one leaf according to the theoretical LAI models.<ref>W.W. Wilhelm, K. Ruwe, M.R. Schlemmer (2000), "Comparisons of three Leaf Area Index Meters in a Corn Canopy” Crop Science 40:1179-1183</ref>
 
==See also==
*[[Canopy (ecology)]]
*[[Hemispherical photography]]
*[[Normalized Difference Vegetation Index]]
*[[Specific leaf area]]
 
== References ==
* [http://www.fao.org/landandwater/agll/gaez/app/a6.htm  FAO: calculation of primary production]
* [http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=550583&tools=bot  Non-Existence of an Optimum Leaf Area Index for the Production Rate of White Clover Grown Under Constant Conditions]
* Law, B.E., T. Arkebauer, J.L. Campbell, J. Chen, O. Sun, M. Schwartz, C. van Ingen, S. Verma. 2008. Terrestrial Carbon Observations: Protocols for Vegetation Sampling and Data Submission. Report 55, Global Terrestrial Observing System. FAO, Rome. 87 pp.
* W.W. Wilhelm, K. Ruwe, M.R. Schlemmer (2000)“Comparisons of three Leaf Area Index Meters in a Corn Canopy”  Crop Science 40: 1179-1183
* [http://www.uni-giessen.de/~gh1461/plapada/lai/lai.html LAI Definition of University of Giessen, Germany]
{{reflist}}
 
[[Category:Agronomy]]
[[Category:Forest modelling]]
[[Category:Remote sensing]]
[[Category:Dimensionless numbers]]

Latest revision as of 08:05, 10 November 2014

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