[1] A study is conducted of the principal chemical effects induced by the passage of a single sprite streamer through the mesosphere at an altitude of 70 km. Recent high-speed imaging of sprite streamers has revealed them to comprise bright (1-100 GR), compact (decameter-scale) heads moving at $10 7 m s À1 . On the basis of these observations, a quantitative model of the chemical dynamics of the streamer head and trailing region is constructed using a nonlinear coupled kinetic scheme of 80+ species and 800+ reactions. In this initial study, chemical processes related to currents in the trailing column and to vibrational kinetics of N 2 and O 2 are not included. The descending streamer head impulsively (t $ 10 ms) ionizes the gas (fractional ionization density $10 À9 ), leaving in its trail a large population of ions, and dissociated and excited neutral byproducts. Electrons created by ionization within the head persist within the trailing column for about 1 s, with losses occurring approximately equally by dissociative attachment with ambient O 3 , and by dissociative recombination with the positive ion cluster N 2 O 2 + . The ion cluster is produced within the trailing channel by a three-step process involving ionization of N 2 , N 2 + charge exchange with O 2 , and finally three-body creation of N 2 O 2 + . On the basis of simulation results, it is concluded that the observed reignition of sprites most likely originates in remnant patches of cold electrons in the decaying streamer channels of a previous sprite. Relatively large populations (fractional densities $10 À9 -10 À8 ) of the metastable species