Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil

Seasonal variability in the major soluble ion composition of atmospheric particulate matter in the principal sugar cane growing region of central Sao Paulo State indicates that pre-harvest burning of sugar cane plants is an important influence on the regional scale aerosol chemistry. Results indicated that the principal sources of the aerosols investigated were local or regional in nature (scale of tens to a few hundreds of km), and that differences between air masses of varying origins were small. Fine particles were typically acidic, containing secondary nitrates, sulphates and organic species. Coarse fraction concentrations were mainly influenced by physical parameters (wind speed, movement of vehicles and surface condition) affecting rates of re-suspension, although secondary nitrate and sulphate were also present in the larger particles. Concentrations of all measured species except sodium and chloride were higher during the burning season. Although concentrations were lower than often found in polluted urban environments, the massive increases during much of the year, due to a single anthropogenic activity (sugar cane burning) are indicative of a very large perturbation of the lower troposphere in the region relative to the natural condition. These aerosols are suspected of promoting respiratory disease. They also represent an important mechanism for the tropospheric transport of species relevant to surface acidification (sulphates, nitrates, ammonium and organic acids) and soil nutrient status (potassium, nitrogen, ammonium, calcium), so their impact on fragile natural ecosystems (following deposition) needs to be considered.

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Main Authors: Allen, A.G, Cardoso, A.A 54091, da Rocha, G.O
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Published: ELSEVIER 2004
Subjects:AEROSOLS, IONS, SUGAR CANE, BIOMASS, CAÑA DE AZUCAR,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2004.06.019
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1510442023-07-04T00:12:04ZInfluence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil Allen, A.G Cardoso, A.A 54091 da Rocha, G.O textELSEVIER2004spaSeasonal variability in the major soluble ion composition of atmospheric particulate matter in the principal sugar cane growing region of central Sao Paulo State indicates that pre-harvest burning of sugar cane plants is an important influence on the regional scale aerosol chemistry. Results indicated that the principal sources of the aerosols investigated were local or regional in nature (scale of tens to a few hundreds of km), and that differences between air masses of varying origins were small. Fine particles were typically acidic, containing secondary nitrates, sulphates and organic species. Coarse fraction concentrations were mainly influenced by physical parameters (wind speed, movement of vehicles and surface condition) affecting rates of re-suspension, although secondary nitrate and sulphate were also present in the larger particles. Concentrations of all measured species except sodium and chloride were higher during the burning season. Although concentrations were lower than often found in polluted urban environments, the massive increases during much of the year, due to a single anthropogenic activity (sugar cane burning) are indicative of a very large perturbation of the lower troposphere in the region relative to the natural condition. These aerosols are suspected of promoting respiratory disease. They also represent an important mechanism for the tropospheric transport of species relevant to surface acidification (sulphates, nitrates, ammonium and organic acids) and soil nutrient status (potassium, nitrogen, ammonium, calcium), so their impact on fragile natural ecosystems (following deposition) needs to be considered.Seasonal variability in the major soluble ion composition of atmospheric particulate matter in the principal sugar cane growing region of central Sao Paulo State indicates that pre-harvest burning of sugar cane plants is an important influence on the regional scale aerosol chemistry. Results indicated that the principal sources of the aerosols investigated were local or regional in nature (scale of tens to a few hundreds of km), and that differences between air masses of varying origins were small. Fine particles were typically acidic, containing secondary nitrates, sulphates and organic species. Coarse fraction concentrations were mainly influenced by physical parameters (wind speed, movement of vehicles and surface condition) affecting rates of re-suspension, although secondary nitrate and sulphate were also present in the larger particles. Concentrations of all measured species except sodium and chloride were higher during the burning season. Although concentrations were lower than often found in polluted urban environments, the massive increases during much of the year, due to a single anthropogenic activity (sugar cane burning) are indicative of a very large perturbation of the lower troposphere in the region relative to the natural condition. These aerosols are suspected of promoting respiratory disease. They also represent an important mechanism for the tropospheric transport of species relevant to surface acidification (sulphates, nitrates, ammonium and organic acids) and soil nutrient status (potassium, nitrogen, ammonium, calcium), so their impact on fragile natural ecosystems (following deposition) needs to be considered.AEROSOLSIONSSUGAR CANEBIOMASSCAÑA DE AZUCARhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2004.06.019
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language spa
topic AEROSOLS
IONS
SUGAR CANE
BIOMASS
CAÑA DE AZUCAR
AEROSOLS
IONS
SUGAR CANE
BIOMASS
CAÑA DE AZUCAR
spellingShingle AEROSOLS
IONS
SUGAR CANE
BIOMASS
CAÑA DE AZUCAR
AEROSOLS
IONS
SUGAR CANE
BIOMASS
CAÑA DE AZUCAR
Allen, A.G
Cardoso, A.A 54091
da Rocha, G.O
Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
description Seasonal variability in the major soluble ion composition of atmospheric particulate matter in the principal sugar cane growing region of central Sao Paulo State indicates that pre-harvest burning of sugar cane plants is an important influence on the regional scale aerosol chemistry. Results indicated that the principal sources of the aerosols investigated were local or regional in nature (scale of tens to a few hundreds of km), and that differences between air masses of varying origins were small. Fine particles were typically acidic, containing secondary nitrates, sulphates and organic species. Coarse fraction concentrations were mainly influenced by physical parameters (wind speed, movement of vehicles and surface condition) affecting rates of re-suspension, although secondary nitrate and sulphate were also present in the larger particles. Concentrations of all measured species except sodium and chloride were higher during the burning season. Although concentrations were lower than often found in polluted urban environments, the massive increases during much of the year, due to a single anthropogenic activity (sugar cane burning) are indicative of a very large perturbation of the lower troposphere in the region relative to the natural condition. These aerosols are suspected of promoting respiratory disease. They also represent an important mechanism for the tropospheric transport of species relevant to surface acidification (sulphates, nitrates, ammonium and organic acids) and soil nutrient status (potassium, nitrogen, ammonium, calcium), so their impact on fragile natural ecosystems (following deposition) needs to be considered.
format Texto
topic_facet AEROSOLS
IONS
SUGAR CANE
BIOMASS
CAÑA DE AZUCAR
author Allen, A.G
Cardoso, A.A 54091
da Rocha, G.O
author_facet Allen, A.G
Cardoso, A.A 54091
da Rocha, G.O
author_sort Allen, A.G
title Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
title_short Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
title_full Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
title_fullStr Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in Southeastern Brazil
title_sort influence of sugar cane burning on aerosol soluble ion composition in southeastern brazil
publisher ELSEVIER
publishDate 2004
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2004.06.019
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AT darochago influenceofsugarcaneburningonaerosolsolubleioncompositioninsoutheasternbrazil
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