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Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report: Present-day tropospheric ozone distribution and trends relevant to vegetation

Authors :
Gina Mills
Håkan Pleijel
Christopher S. Malley
Baerbel Sinha
Owen R. Cooper
Martin G. Schultz
Howard S. Neufeld
David Simpson
Katrina Sharps
Zhaozhong Feng
Giacomo Gerosa
Harry Harmens
Kazuhiko Kobayashi
Pallavi Saxena
Elena Paoletti
Vinayak Sinha
Xiaobin Xu
Source :
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene, Vol 6, Iss 1 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BioOne, 2018.

Abstract

This Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report (TOAR) on the current state of knowledge of ozone metrics of relevance to vegetation ('TOAR-Vegetation') reports on present-day global distribution of ozone at over 3300 vegetated sites and the long-term trends at nearly 1200 sites. 'TOAR-Vegetation' focusses on three metrics over vegetation-relevant time-periods across major world climatic zones: M12, the mean ozone during 08:00–19:59; AOT40, the accumulation of hourly mean ozone values over 40 ppb during daylight hours, and W126 with stronger weighting to higher hourly mean values, accumulated during 08:00–19:59. Although the density of measurement stations is highly variable across regions, in general, the highest ozone values (mean, 2010–14) are in mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere, including southern USA, the Mediterranean basin, northern India, north, north-west and east China, the Republic of Korea and Japan. The lowest metric values reported are in Australia, New Zealand, southern parts of South America and some northern parts of Europe, Canada and the USA. Regional-scale assessments showed, for example, significantly higher AOT40 and W126 values in East Asia (EAS) than Europe (EUR) in wheat growing areas ('p' < 0.05), but not in rice growing areas. In NAM, the dominant trend during 1995–2014 was a significant decrease in ozone, whilst in EUR it was no change and in EAS it was a significant increase. TOAR-Vegetation provides recommendations to facilitate a more complete global assessment of ozone impacts on vegetation in the future, including: an increase in monitoring of ozone and collation of field evidence of the damaging effects on vegetation; an investigation of the effects on peri-urban agriculture and in mountain/upland areas; inclusion of additional pollutant, meteorological and inlet height data in the TOAR dataset; where not already in existence, establishing new region-specific thresholds for vegetation damage and an innovative integration of observations and modelling including stomatal uptake of the pollutant.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23251026
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.71cebd1ac05f443d88997cbfb5eda41a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1525/elementa.302