The impacts of reactive terpene emissions from plants on air quality in Las Vegas, Nevada

A three-part study was conducted to quantify the impact of landscaped vegetation on air quality in a rapidly expanding urban area in the arid southeastern United States. The study combines in situ, plant-level measurements, a spatial emissions inventory, and a photochemical box model. Maximum plant-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Atmospheric environment (1994) 2009-09, Vol.43 (27), p.4109-4123
Hauptverfasser: Papiez, Maria R., Potosnak, Mark J., Goliff, Wendy S., Guenther, Alex B., Matsunaga, Sou N., Stockwell, William R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A three-part study was conducted to quantify the impact of landscaped vegetation on air quality in a rapidly expanding urban area in the arid southeastern United States. The study combines in situ, plant-level measurements, a spatial emissions inventory, and a photochemical box model. Maximum plant-level basal emission rates were moderate: 18.1 μgC gdw −1 h −1 ( Washingtonia spp., palms) for isoprene and 9.56 μgC gdw −1 h −1 ( Fraxinus velutina, Arizona ash) for monoterpenes. Sesquiterpene emission rates were low for plant species selected in this study, with no measurement exceeding 0.1 μgC gdw −1 h −1. The high ambient temperatures combined with moderate plant-level emission factors resulted in landscape emission factors that were low (250–640 μgC m −2 h −1) compared to more mesic environments (e.g., the southeastern United States). The Regional Atmospheric Chemistry Mechanism (RACM) was modified to include a new reaction pathway for ocimene. Using measured concentrations of anthropogenic hydrocarbons and other reactive air pollutants (NO x , ozone), the box model employing the RACM mechanism revealed that these modest emissions could have a significant impact on air quality. For a suburban location that was downwind of the urban core (high NO x ; low anthropogenic hydrocarbons), biogenic terpenes increased time-dependent ozone production rates by a factor of 50. Our study demonstrates that low-biomass density landscapes emit sufficient biogenic terpenes to have a significant impact on regional air quality.
ISSN:1352-2310
1873-2844
DOI:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2009.05.048