New constraints on biogenic emissions using satellite-based estimates of carbon monoxide fluxes
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Published:2019-11-08
Issue:21
Volume:19
Page:13569-13579
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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:
Worden Helen M.ORCID, Bloom A. Anthony, Worden John R., Jiang ZheORCID, Marais Eloise A., Stavrakou Trissevgeni, Gaubert BenjaminORCID, Lacey ForrestORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Biogenic non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOCs) emitted
from vegetation are a primary source for the chemical production of carbon
monoxide (CO) in the atmosphere, and these biogenic emissions account for
about 18 % of the global CO burden. Partitioning CO fluxes to different
source types in top-down inversion methods is challenging; typically a
simple scaling of the posterior flux to prior flux values for fossil fuel,
biogenic and biomass burning sources is used. Here we show top-down
estimates of biogenic CO fluxes using a Bayesian inference approach, which
explicitly accounts for both posterior and a priori CO flux uncertainties.
This approach re-partitions CO fluxes following inversion of Measurements Of
Pollution In The Troposphere (MOPITT) CO observations with the GEOS-Chem
model, a global chemical transport model driven by assimilated meteorology
from the NASA Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS). We compare these
results to the prior information for CO used to represent biogenic NMVOCs
from GEOS-Chem, which uses the Model of Emissions of Gases and Aerosols from
Nature (MEGAN) for biogenic emissions. We evaluate the a posteriori biogenic
CO fluxes against top-down estimates of isoprene fluxes using Ozone
Monitoring Instrument (OMI) formaldehyde observations. We find similar
seasonality and spatial consistency in the posterior CO and top-down
isoprene estimates globally. For the African savanna region, both top-down
CO and isoprene seasonality vary significantly from the MEGAN a priori
inventory. This method for estimating biogenic sources of CO will provide an
independent constraint on modeled biogenic emissions and has the potential
for diagnosing decadal-scale changes in emissions due to land-use change and
climate variability.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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