Residence times of air in a mature forest: observational evidence from a free-air CO2 enrichment experiment
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Published:2023-02-13
Issue:3
Volume:23
Page:2145-2165
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Bannister Edward J.ORCID, Jesson MikeORCID, Harper Nicholas J., Hart Kris M., Curioni Giulio, Cai XiaomingORCID, MacKenzie A. RobORCID
Abstract
Abstract. In forests, the residence time of air – the inverse of first-order
exchange rates – influences in-canopy chemistry and the exchanges of
momentum, energy, and mass with the surrounding atmosphere. Accurate
estimates are needed for chemical investigations of reactive trace species,
such as volatile organic compounds, some of whose chemical lifetimes are on
the order of average residence times. However, very few observational
residence-time estimates have been reported. Little is known about even the
basic statistics of real-world residence times or how they are influenced by
meteorological variables such as turbulence or atmospheric stability. Here,
we report opportunistic investigations of residence time of air in a
free-air carbon dioxide enrichment (FACE) facility in a mature, broadleaf
deciduous forest with canopy height of hc≈25 m. Using nearly 50 million FACE observations, we find that median daytime residence times in
the tree crowns range from around 70 s when the trees are in leaf to just
over 34 s when they are not. Residence times increase with increasing
atmospheric stability, as does the spread around their central value.
Residence times scale approximately with the reciprocal of the friction
velocity, u∗. During some calm evenings in the growing season, we
observe distinctly different behaviour: pooled air being sporadically and
unpredictably vented – evidenced by sustained increases in CO2
concentration – when intermittent turbulence penetrates the canopy. In these
conditions, the concept of a residence time is less clearly defined.
Parameterisations available in the literature underestimate turbulent
exchange in the upper half of forest crowns and overestimate the frequency
of long residence times. Robust parameterisations of residence times (or,
equivalently, fractions of emissions escaping the canopy) may be generated
from inverse-gamma distributions, with the parameters 1.4≤α≤1.8 and β=hc/u∗ estimated from widely measured
flow variables. In this case, the mean value for τ becomes formally
defined as τ‾=β/(α-1). For species released in the
canopy during the daytime, chemical transformations are unlikely unless the
reaction timescale is on the order of a few minutes or less.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council Jabbs Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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