in this study, we investigated the potential of the photochemical resistance index (pri) to track photosynthetic activity under water stress conditions by measuring pri, leaf fluorescence, the xanthophyll cycle and photosynthetic activity in different forest tree species subjected to progressive drought. the pri declined with pre-dawn water potential and a significant relationship between pri and the xanthophyll de-epoxidation state (deps) was observed, although with large interspecific variability in the sensitivity of pri to changes in deps. for single tree species, a strong relationship was observed on either pri light saturated photosynthesis or pri maximum photochemical efficiency of psii (df/fm 0); a larger variability in both relationships was apparent when data from different species were pooled together. however, an improved correlation was shown only in the former relationship by plotting the dpri (dawn pri minus the midday pri values). thus, we conclude that pri is able to provide a good estimate of maximum co2 assimilation at saturating light and df/fm 0 for single tree species, despite the severe drought conditions applied. pri should be applied more cautiously when dealing with multispecific forests because of confounding factors such as the strong interspecific differences in the initial value of pri and in the sensitivity of pri to changes in deps in response to drought.
in recent years, increasing attention has been paid to refine the methodologies suitable for tracking the photosynthetic activity of forest vegetation; this is a necessary step towards assessing carbon uptake by forest ecosystems using remote sensing (grace et al. 2007).