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Title: Carbon dioxide measurements in tropical east African biomes

Abstract

From January 1977 through May 1978 atmospheric CO/sub 2/ concentrations were measured hourly and/or continuously at bimonthly intervals over periods varying from 5 to 8 days at 10 different locations in Kenya, East Africa. During each of these periods, at least two, and in some cases five, vertical profile measurements of CO/sub 2/ concentrations were conducted above different biomes. A large diurnal CO/sub 2/ periodicity was observed over land, with daytime drawdowns to 322 ppm and nighttime buildups to more than 400 ppm observed in savannah regions. In and around tropical rain forests, drawdowns to 310 ppm and buildups to more than 400 ppm were regularly observed. On the higher reaches of Mount Kenya, the diurnal CO/sub 2/ cycle was considerably reduced in amplitude, with variations in the range of 2-6 ppm throughout the 16-month study period. On sunny days, the drawdown of CO/sub 2/ was measurable to heights of at least 4000 m above ground level. Other CO/sub 2/ measurements in air over the Indian Ocean (to distances of up to 450 km upwind of the coast) produced fairly consistent concentrations of about 328.5 ppm which did not fluctuate diurnally. The weekly mean CO/sub 2/ concentrations over Kenya appearmore » to have a bimodal structure, with minima occurring in July and January. On the basis of the data collected during the study it appears likely that regular observations at a high-altitude station on Mount Kenya, either with flask sampling or continuous analyzer measurements, are likely to yield data useful for estimates of CO/sub 2/ concentration backgrounds and trends. Also, there is strong evidence that Mount Kenya would be a good location to measure large-scale interhemispheric CO/sub 2/ exchanges and provide a unique base from which to study the effects of the tropical biome on biogeochemical phenomena. 20 references, 12 figures, 2 tables.« less

Authors:
; ;
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Univ. of Colorado, Boulder
OSTI Identifier:
5373304
Report Number(s):
CONF-790842-
Journal ID: CODEN: JGREA
Resource Type:
Conference
Journal Name:
J. Geophys. Res.; (United States)
Additional Journal Information:
Journal Volume: 86:C6; Conference: International conference of global atmospheric pollution, Boulder, CO, USA, 12 Aug 1979
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; CARBON DIOXIDE; ECOLOGICAL CONCENTRATION; AIR POLLUTION; DAILY VARIATIONS; ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSPORT; EXPERIMENTAL DATA; KENYA; AFRICA; CARBON COMPOUNDS; CARBON OXIDES; CHALCOGENIDES; DATA; DEVELOPING COUNTRIES; INFORMATION; MASS TRANSFER; NUMERICAL DATA; OXIDES; OXYGEN COMPOUNDS; POLLUTION; VARIATIONS; 500200* - Environment, Atmospheric- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (-1989)

Citation Formats

Schnell, R C, Odh, S A, and Njau, L N. Carbon dioxide measurements in tropical east African biomes. United States: N. p., 1981. Web.
Schnell, R C, Odh, S A, & Njau, L N. Carbon dioxide measurements in tropical east African biomes. United States.
Schnell, R C, Odh, S A, and Njau, L N. 1981. "Carbon dioxide measurements in tropical east African biomes". United States.
@article{osti_5373304,
title = {Carbon dioxide measurements in tropical east African biomes},
author = {Schnell, R C and Odh, S A and Njau, L N},
abstractNote = {From January 1977 through May 1978 atmospheric CO/sub 2/ concentrations were measured hourly and/or continuously at bimonthly intervals over periods varying from 5 to 8 days at 10 different locations in Kenya, East Africa. During each of these periods, at least two, and in some cases five, vertical profile measurements of CO/sub 2/ concentrations were conducted above different biomes. A large diurnal CO/sub 2/ periodicity was observed over land, with daytime drawdowns to 322 ppm and nighttime buildups to more than 400 ppm observed in savannah regions. In and around tropical rain forests, drawdowns to 310 ppm and buildups to more than 400 ppm were regularly observed. On the higher reaches of Mount Kenya, the diurnal CO/sub 2/ cycle was considerably reduced in amplitude, with variations in the range of 2-6 ppm throughout the 16-month study period. On sunny days, the drawdown of CO/sub 2/ was measurable to heights of at least 4000 m above ground level. Other CO/sub 2/ measurements in air over the Indian Ocean (to distances of up to 450 km upwind of the coast) produced fairly consistent concentrations of about 328.5 ppm which did not fluctuate diurnally. The weekly mean CO/sub 2/ concentrations over Kenya appear to have a bimodal structure, with minima occurring in July and January. On the basis of the data collected during the study it appears likely that regular observations at a high-altitude station on Mount Kenya, either with flask sampling or continuous analyzer measurements, are likely to yield data useful for estimates of CO/sub 2/ concentration backgrounds and trends. Also, there is strong evidence that Mount Kenya would be a good location to measure large-scale interhemispheric CO/sub 2/ exchanges and provide a unique base from which to study the effects of the tropical biome on biogeochemical phenomena. 20 references, 12 figures, 2 tables.},
doi = {},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/5373304}, journal = {J. Geophys. Res.; (United States)},
number = ,
volume = 86:C6,
place = {United States},
year = {Sat Jun 20 00:00:00 EDT 1981},
month = {Sat Jun 20 00:00:00 EDT 1981}
}

Conference:
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