1992
DOI: 10.1029/92gb02123
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Gaseous ammonia fluxes and background concentrations in terrestrial ecosystems of the United States

Abstract: Ammonia (NH3) is the dominant gaseous base in the atmosphere and the principal neutralizing agent for atmospheric acids, yet remains one of the least well characterized atmospheric trace compounds. In particular, the spatial and temporal distribution of the background concentrations in terrestrial ecosystems and the importance of natural emissions from undisturbed soils and vegetation is poorly understood. This situation persists because of experimental difficulties associated with ammonia measurements, the ra… Show more

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Cited by 127 publications
(71 citation statements)
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“…The mean values obtained for background site #2 in this study were 4.6 ppb (daylong), 5.8 ppb (daytime) and 2.2 ppb (night). These values are comparable to those obtained by Langford et al (1992), Buijsman et al (1998) and Wilson and Serre (2007a). When NH 3 values from our study are compared to the mean levels from other studies, it can be seen that the data corresponds well to these earlier measurements.…”
Section: Ambient Ammonia Concentrations In Background Levelssupporting
confidence: 79%
“…The mean values obtained for background site #2 in this study were 4.6 ppb (daylong), 5.8 ppb (daytime) and 2.2 ppb (night). These values are comparable to those obtained by Langford et al (1992), Buijsman et al (1998) and Wilson and Serre (2007a). When NH 3 values from our study are compared to the mean levels from other studies, it can be seen that the data corresponds well to these earlier measurements.…”
Section: Ambient Ammonia Concentrations In Background Levelssupporting
confidence: 79%
“…1). This difference in NH 3 concentrations has also been observed by other papers and is in agreement with the temperature dependence of NH 3 emissions from animal waste, natural and fertilized soils, and vegetations Langford et al, 1992;Yamamoto et al, 1995;Asman et al, 1998;Lefer et al, 1999;Aneja et al, 2000;Robarge et al, 2002;Pryor et al, 2001), which are at low values during winter. The characteristics of these sources determine the temporal and spatial NH 3 distribution.…”
Section: Temporal Variationsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…This reactivity leads to a very short lifetime (less than two weeks) and large temporal and spatial variability. Background summer ammonia mixing ratios in the United States can range from 0.05 to 47 ppbv [17]. In situ observations of atmospheric ammonia are sparse and infrequent, making satellite observations of tropospheric NH 3 highly desirable.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%