Assessing the Intensity
of Marine Biogenic Influence
on the Lower Atmosphere: An Insight into the Distribution of Marine
Biogenic Aerosols over the Eastern China Seas
posted on 2023-08-14, 15:06authored byShengqian Zhou, Ying Chen, Fanghui Wang, Yang Bao, Xiping Ding, Zongjun Xu
Marine biological activities make a non-negligible contribution
to atmospheric aerosols, leading to potential impacts on the regional
atmospheric environment and climate. The eastern China seas are highly
productive with significant emissions of biogenic substances, but
the spatiotemporal variations of marine biogenic aerosols are not
well known. Air mass exposure to chlorophyll a (AEC)
can be used to indicate the influence of biogenic sources on the atmosphere
to a certain degree. In this study, the 12 year (2009–2020)
daily AEC were calculated over the eastern China seas, showing the
spatial and seasonal patterns of marine biogenic influence intensity
which were co-controlled by surface phytoplankton biomass and boundary
layer height. By combining the AEC values, relevant meteorological
parameters, and extensive observations of a typical biogenic secondary
aerosol component, methanesulfonate (MSA), a parameterization scheme
for MSA simulation was successfully constructed. This AEC-based approach
with observation constraints provides a new insight into the distribution
of marine biogenic aerosols. Meanwhile, the wintertime air mass retention
over land exhibited a significant decrease, showing a decadal weakening
trend of terrestrial transport, which is probably related to the weakening
of the East Asian winter monsoon. Thus, marine biogenic aerosols may
play an increasingly important role in the studied region.