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The Influence of biogenic emissions on tropospheric ozone over Equatorial Africa during 2006. J.E. Williams, R. Scheele, P.F.J. van Velthoven, J-P. Cammas, V. Thouret, C. Lacy-Galeux and A. Völz-Thomas. Questions within the AMMA project How well can a state-of-the-art global 3D CTM
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The Influence of biogenic emissions on tropospheric ozone over Equatorial Africa during 2006 J.E. Williams, R. Scheele, P.F.J. van Velthoven, J-P. Cammas, V. Thouret, C. Lacy-Galeux and A. Völz-Thomas
Questions within the AMMA project • How well can a state-of-the-art global 3D CTM capture the seasonality and variability of trace gas species in the African Troposphere. • Have improvements been made to the recent emission estimates which influence the performance of the model?? • What governs the oxidizing potential of this region?? • How do biogenic emissions from Africa influence the oxidative capacity of the global troposphere?? The Biogenic Emission study
Driven by ECMWF operational data (6hrly). • Lumped chemical mechanism : modified • CBM4 (38 species) HOx-NOx-CO-CH4 • Organics introduced using the chemical • groups (C=C, CHO, etc). • Heterogeneous oxidation of SO2, N2O5, NH3 • Used in many previous studies including • multi-model intercomparisons. • 34 model layers (1km resolution in UT/LS) • 3 x 2 horizonzal resolution • Emissions: Anthropogenic (RETRO project) • Biomass burning (GFEDv2) • Biogenics (POET vs Lathiere) The TM4 Model
Biogenic NO emissions Regions: (_) Saharan (40-20°N), (_) Sahel (10-20°N), (_) Guinea (0-10°N), and (_) southern Africa(40-0°S) Yienger and Levy (1995) vs Lathiére et al (2006)
Isoprene Emissions (incl monoterp) Regions: (_) Saharan (40-20°N), (_) Sahel (10-20°N), (_) Guinea (0-10°N), and (_) southern Africa (40-0°S) Guenther et al (1995) vs Lathiere et al (2006)
Volatile Organic Compounds Regions: (_) Saharan (40-20°N), (_) Sahel (10-20°N), (_) Guinea (0-10°N), and (_) southern Africa (40-0°S) Additional VOC’s : CH3COOH, HCHO and CH3CHO Different inventories: Acetone, C2H5OH
Percentage differences in annual global fluxes for Africa Fraction = LATH/POET Longitudinal differences not shown but emission regions do shift with season
Sensitivity studies 34 layers,3° x 2°, ECMWF 6 hour re-analysis LiNOx identical, 3 months spin-up
LATH-POET/LATH • [O3] shows regionalsimilarities with [NO]↑ • (c.f. DJF – s.Africa). • [Isoprene] signature when [NO]↑ is ~ equal. • (c.f. MAM – s.Africa) • In the absence of strong [NO]↑ less [O3] in LATH.
LATH-POET/LATH [PAN] shows regional similarities with [Isoprene]↑ (10S-10N). Source of CH3C(O)O2 Low in Sahara. Weaker [PAN] on [NO] ↑
LATH-POET/LATH [HNO3] shows regional similarities with [O3] O3 + h (+H2O) 2OH OH + NO2 HNO3 5% More N deposition as HNO3 adds to decreases in [O3] for the background
LATH-POET/LATH [OH] shows regional similarities with [O3] O3 + h (+H2O) 2OH In general the oxidizing power of the atmosphere decreases when using the LATH inventory
LATH-NOSOIL/LATH • [NO] from soils has a large impact on tropospheric [O3] near the source regions • Differences extend throughout the troposphere • The maximum differences follow the seasonality of the NO emissions
Δ[O3] in Tropical Troposphere African soil NOx influences the Total Tropical Ozone Column by 5-10% over the Atlantic
MOZAIC profiles from Windhoek (22.5°S, 17.5°E) • LATH agrees better with MOZAIC profiles • Largest diff • shown by NOSOIL run • Effect of soil NOx propagates up the column High Soil NOx in DJF (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS
MOZAIC in-flight data over Africa Soil NOx High [O3] over biomass burning regions is not captured (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS,(_) STRAT
25.9°S 28.2°E 6.6°N 2.2°E 1.3°S 36.8°E Very High O3 Values near Lagos (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS
French and German Falcons + UK BAe146 No simulation captures the high [O3] in measurements Lack of variation in soil NO emission between measurements Low [O3] captured when soil NO off!
Comparison with IDAF ground sites : [O3] Dry Site location: 0-15N 10W-10E TM4 generally over-estimates surface [O3] in remote regions by 50-100% Transport of [O3] into measurement site dominates 2-5% stratospheric origin Wet Savannah Forest (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS
Comparison with IDAF ground sites : [NO2] Dry Site location: 0-15N 10W-10E Both POET and LATH over predict [NO2] For some stations soil NO emissions account for nearly 100% of the resident [NO2]. Forest Wet Savannah (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS
Comparison with IDAF ground sites : [HNO3] Dry Location: 0-15N 10W-10E Generally too [HNO3] is too low for many months but [O3] and [NO2] both too high. OH + NO2 HNO3 Why [HNO3] is low ?? Linked to missing OH source or exaggerated sink?? Wet Savannah Forest (_) POET, (_) LATH, (_) NOSOIL, (_) OBS
Chemical Budget : Global Oxidizing capacity African soilNOxlarge affect on CH4 and CO 50% BB CO from Africa thus reducing OH increases transport and lifetime (Jain, 2007) LATH vs POET ; NOSOIL/NOBIO vs LATH
Tropical Chemical Budget for BVOC’s LATH vs POET ; NOSOIL/NOBIO vs LATH • Biogenic emissions of ALD2 and HCHO are insignificant • Doubling of alkanes (PAR) using LATH (~4% globally) • Biogenic NO responsible for oxidizing 20% of trop [ISOP] via O3/OH • Biogenic BVOC’s reduces [OH] moderately
Conclusions • The new biogenic climatology results in moderate improvements to TM4 cf MOZAIC measurements • The new biogenic climatology results in a less oxidising atmosphere increasing lifetime of greenhouse gases by ~2% (CH4) and ~4% (CO) • NO emissions from soils have a large effect on the African troposphere upto the UT/LS (30-50% trop. [O3] directly formed from this source, ~20% [ISOP] oxidation) • Updated frequency of emission inventory and extension of simulation period has potential to improved tropical O3 in global CTM´s • Future Climate: Drier environment reduces soil NO thus potentially increasing CH4 and CO Appearing in ACPD in the next few weeks