Observations of fluorescent and biological aerosol at a high-altitude site in central France

被引:49
|
作者
Gabey, A. M. [1 ]
Vaitilingom, M. [2 ,3 ]
Freney, E. [2 ]
Boulon, J. [2 ]
Sellegri, K. [2 ]
Gallagher, M. W. [1 ]
Crawford, I. P. [1 ]
Robinson, N. H. [4 ]
Stanley, W. R. [5 ]
Kaye, P. H. [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Sch Earth Atmospher & Environm Sci, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
[2] Univ Blaise Pascal, CNRS, Observ Phys Globe, Lab Meteorol Phys, Aubiere, France
[3] Univ Blaise Pascal, CNRS, Lab Synth & Etud Syst Interets Biol, Aubiere, France
[4] Met Off, Exeter, Devon, England
[5] Univ Hertfordshire, Ctr Atmospher & Instrumentat Res, Hatfield AL10 9AB, Herts, England
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
SIZE DISTRIBUTION; ORGANIC-CARBON; FUNGAL SPORES; MASS-SPECTRA; CLOUD-WATER; MU-M; PARTICLE; URBAN; DOME; PUY;
D O I
10.5194/acp-13-7415-2013
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Total bacteria, fungal spore and yeast counts were compared with ultraviolet-light-induced fluorescence (UV-LIF) measurements of ambient aerosol at the summit of the Puy de Dome (PdD) mountain in central France (1465 m a.s.l), which represents a background elevated site. Bacteria, fungal spores and yeast were enumerated by epi-fluorescence microscopy (EFM) and found to number 2.2 to 23 L-1 and 0.8 to 2 L-1, respectively. Bacteria counts on two successive nights were an order of magnitude larger than in the intervening day. A wide issue bioaerosol spectrometer, version 3 (WIBS-3) was used to perform UV-LIF measurements on ambient aerosol sized 0.8 to 20 mu m. Mean total number concentration was 270 L-1 (sigma = 66 L-1), found predominantly in a size mode at 2 mu m for most of the campaign. Total concentration (fluorescent + non-fluorescent aerosol) peaked at 500 L-1 with a size mode at 1 mu m because of a change in air mass origin lasting around 48 h. The WIBS-3 features two excitation and fluorescence detection wavelengths corresponding to different biological molecules, although non-biological interferents also contribute. The mean fluorescent particle concentration after short-wave (280 nm; associated with tryptophan) excitation was 12 L-1 (sigma = 6 L-1), and did not vary much throughout the campaign. In contrast, the mean concentration of particles fluorescent after long-wave (370 nm; associated with NADH) excitation was 95 L-1 (sigma = 25 L-1), and a nightly rise and subsequent fall of up to 100 L-1 formed a strong diurnal cycle in the latter. The two fluorescent populations exhibited size modes at 3 mu m and 2 to 3 mu m, respectively. A hierarchical agglomerative cluster analysis algorithm was applied to the data and used to extract different particle factors. A cluster concentration time series representative of bacteria was identified. This was found to exhibit a diurnal cycle with a maximum peak appearing during the day. Analysis of organic mass spectra recorded using an aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS; Aerodyne Inc.) suggests that aerosol reaching the site at night was more aged than that during the day, indicative of sampling the residual layer at night. Supplementary meteorological data and previous work also show that PdD lies in the residual layer/free troposphere at night, and this is thought to cause the observed diurnal cycles in organic-type and fluorescent aerosol particles. Based on the observed disparity between bacteria and fluorescent particle concentrations, fluorescent non-PBA is likely to be important in the WIBS-3 data and the surprisingly high fluorescent concentration in the residual layer/free troposphere raises questions about a ubiquitous background in continental air during the summer.
引用
收藏
页码:7415 / 7428
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Homogeneous aerosol freezing in the tops of high-altitude tropical cumulonimbus clouds
    Jensen, EJ
    Ackerman, AS
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2006, 33 (08)
  • [42] Review of possible very high-altitude platforms for stratospheric aerosol injection
    Smith, Wake
    Bhattarai, Umang
    Bingaman, Donald C.
    Mace, James L.
    Rice, Christian, V
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2022, 4 (03):
  • [43] ELECTRICAL AEROSOL ANALYZER - DATA REDUCTION FOR HIGH-ALTITUDE OR REDUCED PRESSURE
    YEH, HC
    CHENG, YS
    KANAPILLY, GM
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1981, 15 (05) : 713 - 718
  • [44] Isotopic ratios of nitrate in aerosol samples from Mt. Lulin, a high-altitude station in Central Taiwan
    Guha, Tania
    Lin, C. T.
    Bhattacharya, S. K.
    Mahajan, A. S.
    Ou-Yang, Chang-Feng
    Lan, Yi-Ping
    Hsu, S. C.
    Liang, Mao-Chang
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 154 : 53 - 69
  • [45] Cluster observations of magnetic field fluctuations in the high-altitude cusp
    Nykyri, K
    Cargill, PJ
    Lucek, E
    Horbury, T
    Lavraud, B
    Balogh, A
    Dunlop, MW
    Bogdanova, Y
    Fazakerley, A
    Dandouras, I
    Rème, H
    ANNALES GEOPHYSICAE, 2004, 22 (07) : 2413 - 2429
  • [46] HIGH-ALTITUDE PULMONARY-EDEMA - EPIDEMIOLOGIC OBSERVATIONS IN PERU
    HULTGREN, HN
    MARTICORENA, EA
    CHEST, 1978, 74 (04) : 372 - 376
  • [47] OBSERVATIONS OF A DRAINAGE FLOW EVENT ON A HIGH-ALTITUDE SIMPLE SLOPE
    CLEMENTS, WE
    NAPPO, CJ
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE AND APPLIED METEOROLOGY, 1983, 22 (02): : 331 - 335
  • [48] The effect of intermittency of the jitter of astronomic images in the high-altitude observations
    Nosov, V. V.
    Lukin, V. P.
    Nosov, E., V
    Torgaev, A., V
    Zuev, V. E.
    ADAPTIVE OPTICS SYSTEMS VII, 2020, 11448
  • [49] OBSERVATIONS ON BLOOD-GASES DURING HEMODIALYSIS AT HIGH-ALTITUDE
    KOVNAT, PJ
    PINKERTON, AW
    ROMIG, DA
    ADKISON, HW
    KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL, 1978, 14 (06) : 678 - 678
  • [50] VARIABLE ATMOSPHERIC PROPERTIES DERIVED FROM HIGH-ALTITUDE OBSERVATIONS
    KALLMANN, HK
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, 1960, 65 (08): : 2501 - 2501