2009
DOI: 10.5194/acp-9-3409-2009
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Process-based modelling of biogenic monoterpene emissions combining production and release from storage

Abstract: Abstract. Monoterpenes, primarily emitted by terrestrial vegetation, can influence atmospheric ozone chemistry, and can form precursors for secondary organic aerosol. The short-term emissions of monoterpenes have been well studied and understood, but their long-term variability, which is particularly important for atmospheric chemistry, has not. This understanding is crucial for the understanding of future changes.In this study, two algorithms of terrestrial biogenic monoterpene emissions, the first one based … Show more

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Cited by 130 publications
(130 citation statements)
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“…They are lower then those reported by Guenther et al (2012) and significantly higher than those of Schurgers et al (2009), which are the lowest among the values published in the literature. MEGAN-MACC monoterpene emissions were compared to regional estimates in China and Europe (Table 5) and are within 30 % of regional totals, except for comparison with Curci et al (2009) whose estimate is about a factor of 2 higher than that of MEGAN-MACC.…”
Section: Global and Regional Totals Of Other Speciescontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…They are lower then those reported by Guenther et al (2012) and significantly higher than those of Schurgers et al (2009), which are the lowest among the values published in the literature. MEGAN-MACC monoterpene emissions were compared to regional estimates in China and Europe (Table 5) and are within 30 % of regional totals, except for comparison with Curci et al (2009) whose estimate is about a factor of 2 higher than that of MEGAN-MACC.…”
Section: Global and Regional Totals Of Other Speciescontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…Indeed, the aforementioned parameters may contribute, together with model and measurement uncertainties, to the observed scatter in the data. Biogenic volatile organic compound emissions might even be nonnegligible in winter (Oderbolz et al, 2013;Schurgers et al, 2009;Holzke et al, 2006). Therefore, significant wintertime SOOA concentrations are not in disagreement with the hypothesized biogenic origin.…”
Section: Interpretation Of Pmf Factorsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…There is considerable uncertainty in estimates of the global flux of BVOCs. For example, the global flux of isoprene has been estimated at 412-601 Tg C a −1 and monoterpenes at 30-128 Tg C a −1 with the range due to different emission algorithms, vegetation distributions, climatologies, basal emission rates, and spatial and temporal resolutions (Arneth et al, 2008;Schurgers et al, 2009). Once in the atmosphere, some BVOCs react to produce compounds that can partition into the particulate phase, forming SOA.…”
Section: The Impact Of Secondary Organic Aerosol On the Atmospherementioning
confidence: 99%