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Land cover change impacts on atmospheric chemistry: simulating projected large-scale tree mortality in the United States
- Source :
- Copernicus Publications, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Vol 16, Pp 2323-2340 (2016)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- Copernicus Publications, 2016.
-
Abstract
- Land use and land cover changes impact climate and air quality by altering the exchange of trace gases between the Earth's surface and atmosphere. Large-scale tree mortality that is projected to occur across the United States as a result of insect and disease may therefore have unexplored consequences for tropospheric chemistry. We develop a land use module for the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model to facilitate simulations involving changes to the land surface, and to improve consistency across land–atmosphere exchange processes. The model is used to test the impact of projected national-scale tree mortality risk through 2027 estimated by the 2012 USDA Forest Service National Insect and Disease Risk Assessment. Changes in biogenic emissions alone decrease monthly mean O[subscript 3] by up to 0.4 ppb, but reductions in deposition velocity compensate or exceed the effects of emissions yielding a net increase in O[subscript 3] of more than 1 ppb in some areas. The O[subscript 3] response to the projected change in emissions is affected by the ratio of baseline NO[subscript x] : VOC concentrations, suggesting that in addition to the degree of land cover change, tree mortality impacts depend on whether a region is NO[subscript x]-limited or NO[subscript x]-saturated. Consequently, air quality (as diagnosed by the number of days that 8 h average O[subscript 3] exceeds 70 ppb) improves in polluted environments where changes in emissions are more important than changes to dry deposition, but worsens in clean environments where changes to dry deposition are the more important term. The influence of changes in dry deposition demonstrated here underscores the need to evaluate treatments of this physical process in models. Biogenic secondary organic aerosol loadings are significantly affected across the US, decreasing by 5–10 % across many regions, and by more than 25 % locally. Tree mortality could therefore impact background aerosol loadings by between 0.5 and 2 µg m[superscript −3]. Changes to reactive nitrogen oxide abundance and partitioning are also locally important. The regional effects simulated here are similar in magnitude to other scenarios that consider future biofuel cropping or natural succession, further demonstrating that biosphere–atmosphere exchange should be considered when predicting future air quality and climate. We point to important uncertainties and further development that should be addressed for a more robust understanding of land cover change feedbacks.<br />Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada<br />National Science Foundation (U.S.) (AGC-1238109)
- Subjects :
- Atmospheric Science
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Chemical transport model
Land use
Meteorology
Reactive nitrogen
Land cover
15. Life on land
010501 environmental sciences
Atmospheric sciences
01 natural sciences
lcsh:QC1-999
Trace gas
Aerosol
lcsh:Chemistry
lcsh:QD1-999
13. Climate action
Environmental science
sense organs
Baseline (configuration management)
Air quality index
lcsh:Physics
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Copernicus Publications, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Vol 16, Pp 2323-2340 (2016)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2381da749b02f54e55c4e659344f3d15