Back to Search Start Over

Newly identified climatically and environmentally significant high latitude dust sources

Authors :
Outi Meinander
Pavla Dagsson-Waldhauserova
Pavel Amosov
Elena Aseyeva
Cliff Atkins
Alexander Baklanov
Clarissa Baldo
Sarah Barr
Barbara Barzycka
Liane Benning
Bojan Cvetkovic
Polina Enchilik
Denis Frolov
Santiago Gassó
Konrad Kandler
Nikolay Kasimov
Jan Kavan
James King
Tatyana Koroleva
Viktoria Krupskaya
Monika Kusiak
Michał Laska
Jerome Lasne
Marek Lewandowski
Bartłomiej Luks
James McQuaid
Beatrice Moroni
Benjamin Murray
Ottmar Möhler
Adam Nawrot
Slobodan Nickovic
Norman O’Neill
Goran Pejanovic
Olga Popovicheva
Keyvan Ranjbar
Manolis Romanias
Olga Samonova
Alberto Sanchez-Marroquin
Kerstin Schepanski
Ivan Semenkov
Anna Sharapova
Elena Shevnina
Zongbo Shi
Mikhail Sofiev
Frédéric Thevenet
Throstur Thorsteinsson
Mikhail Timofeev
Nsikanabasi Silas Umo
Andreas Uppstu
Darya Urupina
György Varga
Tomasz Werner
Olafur Arnalds
Ana Vukovic Vimic
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Dust particles emitted from high latitudes (≥ 50° N and ≥ 40° S, including Arctic as a subregion ≥ 60° N), have a potentially large local, regional, and global significance to climate and environment as short-lived climate forcers, air pollutants and nutrient sources. To understand the multiple impacts of the High Latitude Dust (HLD) on the Earth systems, it is foremost to identify the geographic locations and characteristics of local dust sources. Here, we identify, describe, and quantify the Source Intensity (SI) values using the Global Sand and Dust Storms Source Base Map (G-SDS-SBM), for sixty-four HLD sources included in our collection in the Northern (Alaska, Canada, Denmark, Greenland, Iceland, Svalbard, Sweden, and Russia) and Southern (Antarctica and Patagonia) high latitudes. Activity from most of these HLD dust sources show seasonal character. The environmental and climatic effects of dust on clouds and climatic feedbacks, atmospheric chemistry, marine environment, and cryosphere-atmosphere feedbacks at high latitudes are discussed, and regional-scale modelling of dust atmospheric transport from potential Arctic dust sources is demonstrated. It is estimated that high latitude land area with higher (SI ≥ 0.5), very high (SI ≥ 0.7) and the highest potential (SI ≥ 0.9) for dust emission cover >1 670 000 km2, >560 000 km2, and >240 000 km2, respectively. In the Arctic HLD region, land area with SI ≥ 0.5 is 5.5 % (1 035 059 km2), area with SI ≥ 0.7 is 2.3 % (440 804 km2), and with SI ≥ 0.9 it is 1.1 % (208 701 km2). Minimum SI values in the north HLD region are about three orders of magnitude smaller, indicating that the dust sources of this region are highly dependable on weather conditions. In the south HLD region, soil surface conditions are favourable for dust emission during the whole year. Climate change can cause decrease of snow cover duration, retrieval of glaciers, permafrost thaw, and increase of drought and heat waves intensity and frequency, which all lead to the increasing frequency of topsoil conditions favourable for dust emission and thereby increasing probability for dust storms. Our study provides a step forward to improve the representation of HLD in models and to monitor, quantify and assess the environmental and climate significance of HLD in the future.

Details

ISSN :
16807324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8b0b9afe29c2c404334831c34417f380
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-963