Atmosphere × Canopy Interactions of Nitric Acid Vapor in Loblolly Pine Grown in Open‐Top Chambers

Autor: Taylor, G. E., Owens, J. G., Grizzard, T., Selvidge, W. J.
Zdroj: Journal of Environmental Quality; January 1993, Vol. 22 Issue: 1 p70-80, 11p
Abstrakt: Many studies that address the impact of tropospheric O3on agricultural and forested ecosystems utilize the open‐top chamber. During the production of O3using electrical discharge generators fed with dry air, there is an inadvertent addition of HNO3vapor, a highly reactive trace gas. While several studies have proposed that HNO3vapor introduces artifacts, none has measured concentrations of the odd‐N2trace gas in the chamber or investigated the fate of the N in the context of whole‐plant physiology and growth. These questions were investigated using open‐top chambers containing seedlings of loblolly pine (Pinus taedaL.) during the 1988 growing season in Oak Ridge, TN. The O3treatments consisted of charcoal‐filtered or subambient (0.96 µmol m−3, 24‐h mean), ambient (1.62 µmol m−3, 24‐h mean), and elevated (2.36 µmol m−3, 24‐h mean) concentrations, the last being accomplished by proportional O3addition over the diurnal period. Measurements of the HNO3vapor concentration during dry periods only (no rainfall or ground‐level fog) averaged 28.6 nmol m−3(subambient), 55.4 nmol m−3(ambient air), and 240.0 nmol m−3(elevated O3), an 8.4‐fold range. For every 100 mol of O3added to the chamber, 28 mol of HNO3vapor were inadvertently added; this ratio is several times higher than that previously reported. This result, taken with published estimates of leaf conductance to HNO3vapor, indicates a maximum N deposition in the form of HNO3vapor ranging from 19.5 pmol N cm−2leaf area h−1(subambient O3) to 171.9 pmol N cm−2h−1(elevated O3). Given the nutrient content of the seedlings and knowledge of the fate of HNO3vapor on the leaf surface and leaf interior, the degree to which N deposition via HNO3vapor met the N requirements of the loblolly pine seedlings was estimated. Seedlings in the elevated O3treatment had an upper‐limit estimate of 3.5% for the needles and 1.8% for the whole plant of N derived from HNO3vapor. The concentration of HNO3vapor in the chambers, site of HNO3vapor deposition, N requirements of the loblolly pine seedlings, and estimated threshold for phytotoxic effects of HNO3vapor indicate that the inadvertent production of this odd‐N2trace gas is important in understanding the atmospheric chemistry within the chambers, but that the level of N loading in this study is unlikely to affect physiology or growth. However, we recommend that studies that employ higher O3‐exposure scenarios recognize the potential for inadvertent N deposition, particularly in trees grown in N‐deficient substrate.
Databáze: Supplemental Index