“…This is likely because cloud‐level airborne INPs are largely activated to cloud droplets or ice crystals, and only a small fraction remains in the air (Gong et al., 2020; Pereira et al., 2021). The dominant species of immersion freezing INPs in cloud hydrometeor samples are similar to those in air samples, that is, generally biological aerosols at temperatures above −15°C (or above −20°C) and mineral dust particles at temperatures between −30 and −20°C (e.g., J. Chen et al., 2021; Christner et al., 2008; Hill et al., 2014; Joly et al., 2014; Joyce et al., 2019; Vepuri et al., 2021; Yadav et al., 2019; S. J. Zhang et al., 2020). The INP concentration in cloud hydrometeor samples can depend on the concentration of aerosols of certain species that dominate INPs and the scavenging efficiency of the aerosols into cloud droplets (Petters & Wright, 2015).…”