Title of article :
Factors affecting stomatal uptake of ozone by different canopies
and a comparison between dose and exposure
Author/Authors :
Leiming Zhang، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Robert Vet، نويسنده , , Jeffrey R. Brook، نويسنده , , Allan H. Legge، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Measured ozone (O3) and carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations and fluxes over five different canopies (mixed coniferous–
deciduous forest, deciduous forest, corn, soybean and pasture) in the eastern USA were analyzed to investigate the stomatal uptake
of O3. It was found that the ambient O3 concentration levels had little effect on stomatal conductance. However, the accumulated
stomatal uptake of O3, upon reaching a threshold value on any given day, appears to reduce the rate of further O3 uptake
substantially. This may explain why the maximum O3 deposition velocity often appeared in the early morning hours over some
forest canopies. Substantially reduced CO2 fluxes over wet canopies compared to dry canopies suggest that stomata were likely
partially or totally blocked by water droplets or films when canopies were wet.
By using a big-leaf dry deposition model, measured O3 fluxes were separated into stomatal and non-stomatal portions. It was
estimated that stomatal uptake contributed 55–75% of the total daytime O3 fluxes and 40–60% of the total daytime plus nighttime
fluxes, depending on canopy type. This suggests that about half of the total O3 flux occurred through the non-stomatal pathway. At
three locations (deciduous forest, corn and soybean sites), O3 concentrations of 30–60 ppb and of 60–85 ppb contributed equally to
the accumulated stomatal fluxes, while at the other two locations (mixed coniferous–deciduous forest and pasture sites), concentrations
of 30–60 ppb contributed twice as much as those from 60 to 85 ppb.
Keywords :
Stomatal uptake , CO2 flux , Dry and wet canopies , Ozone dry deposition , Ozone exposure
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment