Airborne Bioaerosol Observations Imply a Strong Terrestrial Source in the Summertime Arctic

Author:

Perring Anne E.12ORCID,Mediavilla Braden13ORCID,Wilbanks G. Dewey14,Churnside James H.5,Marchbanks Richard25,Lamb Kara D.256ORCID,Gao Ru‐Shan5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Colgate University Hamilton NY USA

2. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

3. Now at Department of Chemistry Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD USA

4. Now at Weill‐Cornell Medicine New York NY USA

5. Earth Systems Research Laboratory National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Boulder CO USA

6. Now at Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering Columbia University New York NY USA

Abstract

AbstractPrimary biological aerosol (PBA) is a component of coarse mode aerosol which may affect climate and health. The possible climate impacts arise from interactions between PBA and water vapor, especially since some PBA nucleate ice at warm temperatures. The health impacts span from seasonal allergies to transmission of pathogens. Despite their potential importance, the emissions, transport, and atmospheric distribution of PBA are poorly understood, especially at high latitudes where cloud effects could be pronounced. Here we report summertime measurements of fluorescent aerosol (a proxy for PBA) over the Bering and Chukchi Seas using a Wide‐Band Integrated Bioaerosol Sensor aboard a Twin Otter, alongside a lidar which detected water column productivity. Most observations occurred at 300 m over the ocean with periodic excursions to 60 and 900 m. Loadings were always low in the marine boundary layer, despite the presence of subsurface plankton layers and in contrast to other recent reports, likely indicating low oceanic emissions during our study. Large variability was observed in PBA aloft, with higher concentrations approaching those observed over the Continental US. Back trajectory analysis showed that high loadings were associated with recent transit through the continental boundary layer and we estimate PBA emissions from the Arctic tundra of up to 300 m−2 s−1 at the warmest observed temperatures. On days with strong transport from land (∼50% of our flights), PBA accounts for 12% of supermicron number and 64% of supermicron volume, indicating potentially significant effects on the albedo, glaciation and lifetime of Arctic clouds.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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