Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16360
Título: Isoprene and monoterpene fluxes from Central Amazonian rainforest inferred from tower-based and airborne measurements, and implications on the atmospheric chemistry and the local carbon budget
Autor: Kühn, Uwe
Andreae, Meinrat O.
Ammann, Christoph
Araüjo, Alessandro Carioca de
Brancaleoni, Enzo
Ciccioli, Paolo
Dindorf, Tamara
Frattoni, Massimiliano
Gatti, Luciana Vanni
Ganzeveld, Laurens N.
Kruijt, Bart J.
Lelieveld, Jos
Lloyd, Jon
Meixner, Franz X.
Nobre, Antônio Donato
Pöschl, Ulrich
Spirig, Christoph
Stefani, Paolo
Thielmann, Axel
Valentini, Riccardo
Kesselmeier, Jürgen
Palavras-chave: Airborne Survey
Atmospheric Chemistry
Carbon Budget
Climate Modeling
Flux Measurement
Hydroxyl Radical
Isoprene
Monoterpene
Rainforest
Tropical Forest
Vertical Profile
Volatile Organic Compound
Amazonas
Manaus
South America
Data do documento: 2007
Revista: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
É parte de: Volume 7, Número 11, Pags. 2855-2879
Abstract: We estimated the isoprene and monoterpene source strengths of a pristine tropical forest north of Manaus in the central Amazon Basin using three different micrometeorological flux measurement approaches. During the early dry season campaign of the Cooperative LBA Air-borne Regional Experiment (LBA-CLAIRE-2001), a tower-based surface layer gradient (SLG) technique was applied simultaneously with a relaxed eddy accumulation (REA) system. Airborne measurements of vertical profiles within and above the convective boundary layer (CBL) were used to estimate fluxes on a landscape scale by application of the mixed layer gradient (MLG) technique. The mean daytime fluxes of organic carbon measured by REA were 2.1mgC m-2h-1 for isoprene, 0.20mg C m-2h-1 for αpinene, and 0.39 mg C m-2 h-1 for the sum of monoterpenes. These values are in reasonable agreement with fluxes determined with the SLG approach, which exhibited a higher scatter, as expected for the complex terrain investigated. The observed VOC fluxes are in good agreement with simulations using a single-column chemistry and climate model (SCM). In contrast, the model-derived mixing ratios of VOCs were by far higher than observed, indicating that chemical processes may not be adequately represented in the model. The observed vertical gradients of isoprene and its primary degradation products methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) and methacrolein (MACR) suggest that the oxidation capacity in the tropical CBL is much higher than previously assumed. A simple chemical kinetics model was used to infer OH radical concentrations from the vertical gradients of (MVK+MACR)/isoprene. The estimated range of OH concentrations during the daytime was 3-8×10 6 molecules cm-3, i.e., an order of magnitude higher than is estimated for the tropical CBL by current state-of-theart atmospheric chemistry and transport models. The remarkably high OH concentrations were also supported by results of a simple budget analysis, based on the flux-to-lifetime relationship of isoprene within the CBL. Furthermore, VOC fluxes determined with the airborne MLG approach were only in reasonable agreement with those of the tower-based REA and SLG approaches after correction for chemical decay by OH radicals, applying a best estimate OH concentration of 5.5 ×106 molecules cm-3. The SCM model calculations support relatively high OH concentration estimates after specifically being constrained by the mixing ratios of chemical constituents observed during the campaign. The relevance of the VOC fluxes for the local carbon budget of the tropical rainforest site during the measurements campaign was assessed by comparison with the concurrent CO2 fluxes, estimated by three different methods (eddy correlation, Lagrangian dispersion, and mass budget approach). Depending on the CO 2 flux estimate, 1-6% or more of the carbon gained by net ecosystem productivity appeared to be re-emitted through VOC emissions.
DOI: 10.5194/acp-7-2855-2007
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