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Inferring plant–plant interactions using remote sensing

  • Bin J.W. Chen
  • , Shuqing N. Teng
  • , Guang Zheng
  • , Lijuan Cui
  • , Shao peng Li
  • , Arie Staal
  • , Jan U.H. Eitel
  • , Thomas W. Crowther
  • , Miguel Berdugo
  • , Lidong Mo
  • , Haozhi Ma
  • , Lalasia Bialic-Murphy
  • , Constantin M. Zohner
  • , Daniel S. Maynard
  • , Colin Averill
  • , Jian Zhang
  • , Qiang He
  • , Jochem B. Evers
  • , Niels P.R. Anten
  • , Hezi Yizhaq
  • Ilan Stavi, Eli Argaman, Uri Basson, Zhiwei Xu, Ming Juan Zhang, Kechang Niu, Quan Xing Liu, Chi Xu*
*此作品的通讯作者
  • Nanjing Forestry University
  • Nanjing University
  • Chinese Academy of Forestry
  • Utrecht University
  • University of Idaho
  • Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
  • East China Normal University
  • Fudan University
  • Wageningen University & Research
  • Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
  • Dead Sea-Arava Science Center
  • Israel Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development
  • University of Haifa
  • Nanjing Agricultural University

科研成果: 期刊稿件文献综述同行评审

摘要

Rapid technological advancements and increasing data availability have improved the capacity to monitor and evaluate Earth's ecology via remote sensing. However, remote sensing is notoriously ‘blind’ to fine-scale ecological processes such as interactions among plants, which encompass a central topic in ecology. Here, we discuss how remote sensing technologies can help infer plant–plant interactions and their roles in shaping plant-based systems at individual, community and landscape levels. At each of these levels, we outline the key attributes of ecosystems that emerge as a product of plant–plant interactions and could possibly be detected by remote sensing data. We review the theoretical bases, approaches and prospects of how inference of plant–plant interactions can be assessed remotely. At the individual level, we illustrate how close-range remote sensing tools can help to infer plant–plant interactions, especially in experimental settings. At the community level, we use forests to illustrate how remotely sensed community structure can be used to infer dominant interactions as a fundamental force in shaping plant communities. At the landscape level, we highlight how remotely sensed attributes of vegetation states and spatial vegetation patterns can be used to assess the role of local plant–plant interactions in shaping landscape ecological systems. Synthesis. Remote sensing extends the domain of plant ecology to broader and finer spatial scales, assisting to scale ecological patterns and search for generic rules. Robust remote sensing approaches are likely to extend our understanding of how plant–plant interactions shape ecological processes across scales—from individuals to landscapes. Combining these approaches with theories, models, experiments, data-driven approaches and data analysis algorithms will firmly embed remote sensing techniques into ecological context and open new pathways to better understand biotic interactions.

源语言英语
页(从-至)2268-2287
页数20
期刊Journal of Ecology
110
10
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 10月 2022

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