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Satellite evidence for a large source of formic acid from boreal and tropical forests

Authors :
Stavrakou, Trissevgeni
Muller, Jean François
Peeters, J.
Razavi, Ariane
Clarisse, Lieven
Clerbaux, Cathy
Coheur, Pierre
Hurtmans, Daniel
De Mazière, Martine
Vigouroux, Corinne
Deutscher, N.M.
Griffith, D.W.T.
Jones, Nick
Paton-Walsh, Clare
Stavrakou, Trissevgeni
Muller, Jean François
Peeters, J.
Razavi, Ariane
Clarisse, Lieven
Clerbaux, Cathy
Coheur, Pierre
Hurtmans, Daniel
De Mazière, Martine
Vigouroux, Corinne
Deutscher, N.M.
Griffith, D.W.T.
Jones, Nick
Paton-Walsh, Clare
Source :
Nature Geoscience, 5
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Formic acid contributes significantly to acid rain in remote environments. Direct sources of formic acid include human activities, biomass burning and plant leaves. Aside from these direct sources, sunlight-induced oxidation of non-methane hydrocarbons (largely of biogenic origin) is probably the largest source. However, model simulations substantially underpredict atmospheric formic acid levels, indicating that not all sources have been included in the models. Here, we use satellite measurements of formic acid concentrations to constrain model simulations of the global formic acid budget. According to our simulations, 100- 120Tg of formic acid is produced annually, which is two to three times more than that estimated from known sources. We show that 90% of the formic acid produced is biogenic in origin, and largely sourced from tropical and boreal forests. We suggest that terpenoids- volatile organic compounds released by plants- are the predominant precursors. Model comparisons with independent observations of formic acid strengthen our conclusions, and provide indirect validation for the satellite measurements. Finally, we show that the larger formic acid emissions have a substantial impact on rainwater acidity, especially over boreal forests in the summer, where formic acid reduces pH by 0.25- 0.5.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature Geoscience, 5
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn803493762
Document Type :
Electronic Resource