Title: Biocomplexity and Air Quality
1Biocomplexity and Air Quality
Christine Wiedinmyer Project Scientist
I Atmospheric Chemistry Division/ The Institute
for Multidisciplinary Earth Studies
June 22, 2005
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3Earths Improbable Atmosphere
Oxidizing Reducing Inert
Mars Venus Dead Earth Earth
O2 CO2 CH4 H2 N2 Ar
4Why is the chemical composition of the Martian
atmosphere different than Earth?
5What are biosphere-atmosphere interactions?
Radiation
CO2
H2O
Heat
Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
6Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions Volatile
Organic Compounds and Aerosols
Atmospheric Compounds Particles
Gases Particles
deposition
Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
7Why Do We Care?
Visibility Cloud characteristics Climate Air
quality
8The Blue Haze...
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10radiation reflected
radiation reflected
Organic Aerosol
Boundary Layer Moisture and Heating
radiation diffuse
radiation diffuse
radiation direct
Oxidation
H2O
Heat
CO2
Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds
11IPCC Radiative Forcing Potentials
VOC
12Regional Air Quality Ozone (O3)
- Criteria Pollutant
- Concentrations are regulated by the Clean Air Act
- National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)
- O3 lt 120 ppbv (1-hour average)
- O3 lt 80 ppbv (8-hour average)
- Why is it regulated?
- unhealthy to breath
- harmful to materials
- destroys plants (agriculture)
13Regional Air Quality Ozone (O3)
- Ozone produced through atmospheric chemical
reactions - Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)
- VOC
- sunlight
14How do we control air pollution?
- O3 is created in the atmosphere
- not directly emitted
- not linear!
- Need to understand the emissions and chemistry to
know what to control... - Biogenic emissions can be an important component
of the VOCs in certain areas... - Need to measure and understand
- Biogenic VOC emissions!!
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16Above-Canopy Towers for Measuring Ecosystem
Exchange
17NCAR tethered blimp sampling system
VOC sampler
Humidity, Temper., Winds
Particles, O3, CO, CO2
VOC sampler
VOC sampler
Boundary Layer
VOC sampler
30 min integrated sample between ascent and
descent
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19Aircraft Studies
Brazil, CAPOS 2004
Thomas Karl et al.
Biomass Burning / Biogenic Emission Study
Beinderante, INPE
20What do we do with the measurements?
- Inputs to chemistry and climate models
- Simulate atmospheric processes
- Earth System Modeling
- Goals
- better understand current and past conditions
- try to predict future conditions
21Regional Chemical Modeling
Jack Chen Washington State Univ.
22Some things to think about ...
- How will climate change impact BVOC emissions?
- And how will the emissions impact climate change?
- How are we changing biosphere-atmosphere
exchanges by - urbanization
- agriculture
- replanting forests
- What are other feedbacks between the biosphere
and the atmosphere? - aerosols
- carbon exchange
- H2O
23Biogenic VOC and the Earth System
Air pollutants
Biosphere Health (particles, Ozone, PAN)
Climate/ Radiative forcing
Biogeochemical cycle (C, N, S, etc.)
Physical Environment
Chemical Environment
Radiative balance
O3, NO2, CH4, RONO2, OH, CO2, particles
Biogenic VOC Emissions
Trace gas deposition
Ambient temperature, light
Human Activities
Biosphere
Human Perturbations
Land use change
24Work Not Done Alone!!
Alex Guenther, Peter Harley, Thomas Karl, Jim
Greenberg, Andrew Turnipseed, Ulzi Vanchindorj
(NCAR) Brian Lamb and Jack Chen (WSU) Jana
Milford and Tan Sakulyanontvittaya (CU-Boulder)
And MANY More!!
25What is Biocomplexity?
- Biocomplexity of the environment includes
activities designed to foster research and
education on the complex inter-dependencies among
the elements of specific environmental systems
and interactions of different types of systems. - All kinds of organisms -from microbes to
humans-fall within the BE framework, as do
environments that range from frozen polar regions
and volcanic vents to temperate forests and
agricultural lands as well as the neighborhoods
and industries of urban centers. The key
connector of BE activities is complexity -the
idea that research on the individual components
of environmental systems provides only limited
information about the behavior of the systems
themselves.
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27Above-Canopy Towers for Measuring Ecosystem
Exchange
28Chemical Composition of the Atmosphere
Transport and Transformation Anthropogenic
forcing Direct increased atmospheric
burden Indirect climate change
Emission Anthropogenic forcing Direct
Urbanization, industrialization, most
fires Indirect land-use and climate change
29- Biocomplexity in Linked Bioecological-Human
Systems Agent-Based Models of Land-Use Decisions
and Emergent Land Use Patterns in Forested
Regions of the American Midwest and the Brazilian
Amazon - Biocomplexity is the study of the emergence of
self-organized, complex behaviors from the
interaction of many simple agents. Such emergent
complexity is a hallmark of life, from the
organization of molecules into cellular
machinery, through the organization of cells into
tissues, to the organization of individuals into
communities. The other key element of
biocomplexity is the unavoidable presence of
multiple scales. Often, agents organize into much
larger structures those structures organize into
much larger structures, etc.. A classic example
is the primary, secondary, tertiary, and
quaternary folding of DNA into chromosomes that
allows a strand of a length of several
centimeters to fold, without tangling or losing
function, into a chromosome about one micron
long. Biocomplexity is a methodology and
philosophy as well as a field of study. It
focuses on networks of interactions and the
general rules governing such networks.