4.5 Article

Seasonal variations of volatile organic compounds in the coastal Baltic Sea

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 495-507

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/EN09107

Keywords

DMS; isoprene; VOCs; volatile halogenated organic compounds (VHOCs); water

Funding

  1. WGL-Pakt
  2. SOPRAN, BMBF [03F0462B]

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In order to investigate temporal changes in combination with the influence of different environmental parameters on the concentration and the composition of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), seawater samples from the coastal Baltic Sea were weekly measured from January to November 2008. In most cases, concentrations of VOCs varied seasonally and were influenced by changes in temperature and light conditions or biological species composition. A nearly two-fold increase in the mean concentration was noticed for isoprene, iodomethane and bromoform in the season with higher water temperature. The strongest flux of dimethylsulfide to the atmosphere appeared in May and July. Its high production was related to the presence of Prymnesiophyceae. The highest concentrations of diiodomethane and chloroiodomethane were observed with the spring and autumn phytoplankton bloom; their distribution was strongly controlled by light intensity. Flux calculations showed that coastal regions can affect local atmosphere, especially during biologically active periods. The strongest emission of bromoform and iodomethane was in July and August. The data presented here highlights the need to include seasonal cycles when calculating the global budgets and modelling sea-air fluxes of trace gases.

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