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communications earth & environment / Cryptogamic organisms are a substantial source and sink for volatile organic compounds in the Amazon region

Authors :
Edtbauer, Achim
Pfannerstill, Eva Y.
Pires Florentino, Ana Paula
Barbosa, Cybelli G. G.
Rodriguez-Caballero, Emilio
Zannoni, Nora
Alves, Rodrigo P.
Wolff, Stefan
Tsokankunku, Anywhere
Aptroot, André
de Oliveira Sá, Marta
de Araújo, Alessandro C.
Sörgel, Matthias
Mota de Oliveira, Sylvia
Weber, Bettina
Williams, Jonathan
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2021.

Abstract

Cryptogamic organisms such as bryophytes and lichens cover most surfaces within tropical forests, yet their impact on the emission of biogenic volatile organic compounds is unknown. These compounds can strongly influence atmospheric oxidant levels as well as secondary organic aerosol concentrations, and forest canopy leaves have been considered the dominant source of these emissions. Here we present cuvette flux measurements, made in the Amazon rainforest between 2016–2018, and show that common bryophytes emit large quantities of highly reactive sesquiterpenoids and that widespread lichens strongly uptake atmospheric oxidation products. A spatial upscaling approach revealed that cryptogamic organisms emit sesquiterpenoids in quantities comparable to current canopy attributed estimates, and take up atmospheric oxidation products at rates comparable to hydroxyl radical chemistry. We conclude that cryptogamic organisms play an important and hitherto overlooked role in atmospheric chemistry above and within tropical rainforests. Version of record

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......3007..1a83da9b8f2323654aef61cba0916ad6