Suspendable macromolecules are responsible for ice nucleation activity of birch and conifer pollen

被引:230
作者
Pummer, B. G. [1 ]
Bauer, H. [2 ]
Bernardi, J. [3 ]
Bleicher, S. [4 ]
Grothe, H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Vienna Univ Technol, Inst Mat Chem, Vienna, Austria
[2] Vienna Univ Technol, Inst Chem Technol & Analyt, Vienna, Austria
[3] Vienna Univ Technol, USTEM, Vienna, Austria
[4] Univ Bayreuth, Atmospher Chem Res Lab, Bayreuth, Germany
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
LOW-TEMPERATURE ACCLIMATION; CONTACT FREEZING MODES; BIOLOGICAL PARTICLES; SURFACE COMPONENTS; NUCLEI; AEROSOL; ABILITY; IMMERSION; IDENTIFICATION; ATMOSPHERE;
D O I
10.5194/acp-12-2541-2012
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The ice nucleation of bioaerosols (bacteria, pollen, spores, etc.) is a topic of growing interest, since their impact on ice cloud formation and thus on radiative forcing, an important parameter in global climate, is not yet fully understood. Here we show that pollen of different species strongly differ in their ice nucleation behaviour. The average freezing temperatures in laboratory experiments range from 240 to 255 K. As the most efficient nuclei (silver birch, Scots pine and common juniper pollen) have a distribution area up to the Northern timberline, their ice nucleation activity might be a cryoprotective mechanism. Far more intriguingly, it has turned out that water, which has been in contact with pollen and then been separated from the bodies, nucleates as good as the pollen grains themselves. The ice nuclei have to be easily-suspendable macromolecules located on the pollen. Once extracted, they can be distributed further through the atmosphere than the heavy pollen grains and so presumably augment the impact of pollen on ice cloud formation even in the upper troposphere. Our experiments lead to the conclusion that pollen ice nuclei, in contrast to bacterial and fungal ice nucleating proteins, are non-proteinaceous compounds.
引用
收藏
页码:2541 / 2550
页数:10
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