4.7 Article

Direct effect of aerosols on solar radiation and gross primary production in boreal and hemiboreal forests

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 18, Issue 24, Pages 17863-17881

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-18-17863-2018

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland Center of Excellence programme [307331]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [742206]
  3. NordForsk via TRAKT-2018: Transferable Knowledge and Technologies for High-Resolution Environmental Impact Assessment and Management
  4. European network under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [689443]
  5. Estonian Ministry of Sciences project Biosphere-atmosphere interaction and climate research applying the SMEAR Estonia research infrastructure [P170026PKTF]
  6. Russian Science Foundation [17-17-01095]
  7. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research [IUT20-11, IUT20-52]
  8. Academy of Finland [302958]

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The effect of aerosol loading on solar radiation and the subsequent effect on photosynthesis is a relevant question for estimating climate feedback mechanisms. This effect is quantified in the present study using ground-based measurements from five remote sites in boreal and hemiboreal (coniferous and mixed) forests of Eurasia. The diffuse fraction of global radiation associated with the direct effect of aerosols, i.e. excluding the effect of clouds, increases with an increase in the aerosol loading. The increase in the diffuse fraction of global radiation from approximately 0.11 on days characterized by low aerosol loading to 0.2-0.27 on days with relatively high aerosol loading leads to an increase in gross primary production (GPP) between 6% and 14% at all sites. The largest increase in GPP (relative to days with low aerosol loading) is observed for two types of ecosystems: a coniferous forest at high latitudes and a mixed forest at the middle latitudes. For the former ecosystem the change in GPP due to the relatively large increase in the diffuse radiation is compensated for by the moderate increase in the light use efficiency. For the latter ecosystem, the increase in the diffuse radiation is smaller for the same aerosol loading, but the smaller change in GPP due to this relationship between radiation and aerosol loading is compensated for by the higher increase in the light use efficiency. The dependence of GPP on the diffuse fraction of solar radiation has a weakly pronounced maximum related to clouds.

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