Abstract. Large volcanic eruptions with the volcanic explosivity
index (VEI) ≥ 3 are widely known to be the strongest source of
long-lived aerosol in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS).
However, the latest studies have revealed that massive forest (bush) fires
represent another strong source of short-term (but intense) aerosol
perturbations in the UTLS if combustion products from the fires reach these
altitudes via convective ascent within pyrocumulonimbus clouds (pyroCbs).
PyroCbs, generated by boreal wildfires in North America and northeastern Asia
and injecting smoke plumes into the UTLS, have been intensively studied
using both ground- and space-based instruments since the beginning of the
21st century. In this paper, we focus on aerosol layers observed in the UTLS over
Tomsk (56.48∘ N, 85.05∘ E, Western Siberia, Russia) that
could be smoke plumes from such pyroCb events occurring in the
2000–2017 period. Using the HYSPLIT trajectory analysis, we have reliably assigned
nine aerosol layers to 8 out of more than 100 documented pyroCb events,
the aftereffects of which could potentially be detected in the UTLS over
Tomsk. All the eight pyroCb events occurred in the USA and Canada: one event
per year occurred in 2000, 2002, 2003, 2013, 2015, and 2016, whereas two events
occurred in 2017. No plumes from pyroCbs originating in the boreal zone of
Siberia and the Far East (to the east of Tomsk) were observed in the UTLS
over Tomsk between 2000 and 2017. We conclude that the time durations for
pyroCb plumes to be detected in the UTLS using ground-based lidars are less
than about a month, i.e., plumes from pyroCbs generated by wildfires to the
east of Tomsk can significantly diffuse before reaching the Tomsk lidar
station by the westerly zonal transport of air masses. A comparative
analysis of the contributions from pyroCb events and volcanic eruptions with
VEI ≥ 3 to aerosol loading of the UTLS over Tomsk showed the following.
Plumes from two or more pyroCbs that have occurred in North America in a
single year are able to markedly increase the aerosol loading compared to
the previous year. The annual average value of the integrated aerosol
backscatter coefficient Bπ,532a increased by 14.8 %
in 2017 compared to that in 2016 due to multiple pyroCbs occurring in British
Columbia (Canada) in August 2017. The aftereffects of pyroCb events are
comparable to those of volcanic eruptions with VEI ≤ 3, but even
multiple pyroCbs can hardly compete with volcanic eruptions with VEI = 4.
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