Temporal Changes in Ozone Concentrations and Their Impact on Vegetation

ATMOSPHERE(2021)

引用 47|浏览10
暂无评分
摘要
Tropospheric concentrations of phytotoxic ozone (O-3) have undergone a great increase from preindustrial 10-15 ppbv to a present-day concentration of 35-40 ppbv in large parts of the industrialised world due to increased emissions of O-3 precursors including NOx, CO, CH4 and volatile organic compounds. The rate of increase in O-3 concentration ranges between 1 ppbv per decade in remote locations of the Southern hemisphere and 5 ppbv per decade in the Northern hemisphere, where largest sources of O-3 precursors are located. Molecules of O-3 penetrating into the leaves through the stomatal apertures trigger the formation of reactive oxygen species, leading thus to the damage of the photosynthetic apparatus. Accordingly, it is assumed, that O-3 increase reduces the terrestrial carbon uptake relative to the preindustrial era. Here we summarise the results of previous manipulative experiments in laboratory growth cabinets, field open-top chambers and free-air systems together with O-3 flux measurements under natural growth conditions. In particular, we focus on leaf-level physiological responses in trees, variability in stomatal O-3 flux and changes in carbon fluxes and biomass production in forest stands. As the results reported in the literature are highly variable, ranging from negligible to severe declines in photosynthetic carbon uptake, we also discuss the possible interactions of O-3 with other environmental factors including solar radiation, drought, temperature and nitrogen deposition. Those factors were found to have great potential to modulate stomata openness and O-3 fluxes.
更多
查看译文
关键词
carbon uptake,manipulation experiment,interaction effect,tropospheric ozone,stomatal ozone flux
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要