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ON THE INTERPRETATION OF ABSORPTION SPECTRA OF LEAVES–I. INTRODUCTION and THE CORRECTION OF LEAF SPECTRA FOR SURFACE REFLECTION
Authors:John H  McClendon Leonid  Fukshansky
Institution:School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE68588–0118, USA;Institut für Biologie II, Universitat Freiburg, Schänzlestrasse 1, D-7800 Freiburg, W. Germany
Abstract:Abstract— Reflectance and transmittance spectra of leaves and their sum can be corrected to relate only to the light actually entering the leaf, if the reflectance of the epidermal surface is known. The latter is found if the leaf reflectances at several wavelengths near the transmittance minimum in the red are plotted vs the transmittances of a homogeneous suspension of the native pigment-proteins at the same chlorophyll content per unit area and at the same wavelengths. With non-senescent leaves, the relation is linear and the extrapolation of the pigment transmittance to zero gives the value for the surface reflection. Surface reflectance data (both adaxial and abaxial) are given for the leaves of a number of trees and a few herbs, plus examples of the raw and corrected spectra. With normal, glaucous leaves, the adaxial reflectance averaged 4.5% of the incident light ( n = 23, range = 3.7 −5.9, standard deviation = 0.4). The reflectances of the abaxial surfaces ranged between 7 and 13% since additional near-surface reflection occurred at the inside of the epidermis and in the spongy mesophyll. Reflectance and transmittance data demonstrated strong absorption in the epidermis below 480 nm.
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