A Method for Evaluation of UV and Biologically Effective Exposures to Plants |
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Authors: | A. V. Parisi J. C. F. Wong V. Galea |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Medical and Health Physics, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia;Centre for Astronomy and Atmospheric Research, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia;Land and Food Systems, University of Queensland, Gatton College, Lawes, Australia |
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Abstract: | This paper presents a method for evaluating the UV and biologically effective exposures to a plant canopy during the irradiation of soybean with supplemental levels of UV radiation in a greenhouse study. The method employs four materials as dosimeters that allow evaluation of the UV spectra. The exposures evaluated at three growth stages were less by factors of 0.44, 0.49 and 0.56 compared to the ambient exposures. At the end of the irradiation period, the ambient biologically effective exposure for generalized plant response was higher by 180% compared to that calculated over the canopy. This is the magnitude of the error in UV studies that provide the ambient exposure as a measure of the UV incident on the plant. Additionally, the difference between the ambient and canopy exposures varied during the growth stages. These results indicate that the dosimetric technique applied to evaluating the UV exposures over a plant canopy is a more accurate representation of the UV exposure incidence on a plant than any obtained by measuring the ambient exposures only. |
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