Abstract
A high irradiance plant growth chamber was used to study crop water stress indices (CWSI) and baselines with increasing soil water deficit for Tall Fescue (
Festuca arundinacea Schreb.). Canopy temperatures for turf plugs were continuously measured with infrared thermometers, along with plant water use, measured with electronic mini-lysimeters. Net radiation, canopy and air temperatures, and vapor pressure deficit (VPD) levels were recorded and analyzed statistically. The canopy–air temperature differential (
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a) increased with a decrease in soil moisture content.
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a increased as net radiation became greater, independent of soil water deficit. Canopy temperature of well-watered plants decreased at rate of 2.4°C for each 1 kPa reduction in air vapor pressure deficit for all net radiation levels. For each 100 Wm
−2 increase in net radiation, canopy temperature of well-watered plants increased at a rate of 0.6°C and was well correlated (well-watered baseline) with VPD. Increases in canopy temperature coupled with a decrease in transpiration rate were hallmark signs of water stress progression. However, (
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a) and VPD baseline relationships correlated poorly for moderate-stress and severe stress conditions regardless of net radiation levels. Thus, even with the increased precision and replications of a controlled environment study, lower limit crop water stress baselines were quite variable.