Extensive halogen-mediated ozone destruction over the tropical Atlantic Ocean

被引:345
作者
Katie A. Read [1 ]
Anoop S. Mahajan [2 ]
Lucy J. Carpenter [1 ]
Mathew J. Evans [3 ]
Bruno V. E. Faria [4 ]
Dwayne E. Heard [2 ]
James R. Hopkins [5 ]
James D. Lee [5 ]
Sarah J. Moller [1 ]
Alastair C. Lewis [5 ]
Luis Mendes [4 ]
James B. McQuaid [3 ]
Hilke Oetjen [2 ]
Alfonso Saiz-Lopez [6 ]
Michael J. Pilling [2 ]
John M. C. Plane [2 ]
机构
[1] Department of Chemistry, University of York, Heslington
[2] School of Chemistry, University of Leeds, Leeds
[3] School of Earth and the Environment (SEE), University of Leeds
[4] Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia Geofísica (INMG), Delegação de São Vicente, Monte, Mindelo
[5] National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS), University of York, Heslington
[6] Earth and Space Science Division, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
关键词
D O I
10.1038/nature07035
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Increasing tropospheric ozone levels over the past 150 years have led to a significant climate perturbation; the prediction of future trends in tropospheric ozone will require a full understanding of both its precursor emissions and its destruction processes. A large proportion of tropospheric ozone loss occurs in the tropical marine boundary layer and is thought to be driven primarily by high ozone photolysis rates in the presence of high concentrations of water vapour. A further reduction in the tropospheric ozone burden through bromine and iodine emitted from open-ocean marine sources has been postulated by numerical models, but thus far has not been verified by observations. Here we report eight months of spectroscopic measurements at the Cape Verde Observatory indicative of the ubiquitous daytime presence of bromine monoxide and iodine monoxide in the tropical marine boundary layer. A year-round data set of co-located in situ surface trace gas measurements made in conjunction with low-level aircraft observations shows that the mean daily observed ozone loss is ∼50 per cent greater than that simulated by a global chemistry model using a classical photochemistry scheme that excludes halogen chemistry. We perform box model calculations that indicate that the observed halogen concentrations induce the extra ozone loss required for the models to match observations. Our results show that halogen chemistry has a significant and extensive influence on photochemical ozone loss in the tropical Atlantic Ocean boundary layer. The omission of halogen sources and their chemistry in atmospheric models may lead to significant errors in calculations of global ozone budgets, tropospheric oxidizing capacity and methane oxidation rates, both historically and in the future. ©2008 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1232 / 1235
页数:3
相关论文
共 24 条
[1]  
Climate Change 2007: The Physical Sciences Basis
[2]  
Lawrence M.G., Jockel P., von Kuhlmann R., What does the global mean OH concentration tell us?, Atmos. Chem. Phys, 1, pp. 37-49, (2001)
[3]  
Vogt R., Sander R., von Glasow R., Crutzen P.J., Iodine chemistry and its role in halogen activation and ozone loss in the marine boundary layer: A model study, J. Atmos. Chem, 32, pp. 375-395, (1999)
[4]  
von Glasow R., von Kuhlmann R., Lawrence M.G., Platt U., Crutzen P.J., Impact of reactive bromine chemistry in the troposphere, Atmos. Chem. Phys, 4, pp. 2481-2497, (2004)
[5]  
Yang X., Et al., Tropospheric bromine chemistry and its impacts on ozone: A model study, J. Geophys. Res, 110, (2005)
[6]  
von Glasow R., Sander R., Bott A., Crutzen P.J., Modelling halogen chemistry in the marine boundary layer. 1. Cloud-free MBL, J. Geophys. Res, 107, D17, pp. 4341-4356, (2002)
[7]  
Junge C.E., Global ozone budget and exchange between stratosphere and troposphere, Tellus, 14, pp. 363-377, (1962)
[8]  
Lelieveld J., Et al., Increasing ozone over the Atlantic Ocean, Science, 304, pp. 1483-1487, (2004)
[9]  
Bloss W.J., Et al., The oxidative capacity of the troposphere: Coupling of field measurements of OH and a global chemistry transport model, Faraday Discuss, 130, pp. 425-436, (2005)
[10]  
Falkowski P.G., Evolution of the nitrogen cycle and its influence on the biological sequestration of CO<sub>2</sub> in the ocean, Nature, 387, pp. 272-274, (1997)