Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2021)

A humidity-based exposure index representing ozone damage effects on vegetation

  • Cheng Gong,
  • Xu Yue,
  • Hong Liao,
  • Yimian Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abecbb
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 044030

Abstract

Read online

Surface ozone (O _3 ) is detrimental to plant health. Traditional exposure indexes, such as accumulated hourly O _3 concentrations over a threshold of 40 ppb (AOT40), are easy to be derived and widely used to assess O _3 damage effects on vegetation. However, the regulation of environmental stresses on O _3 stomatal uptake is ignored. In comparison, the dose-based indexes are much more reasonable but require complex parameterization that hinders further applications. Here, we propose a new humidity-based index (O _3 RH) representing O _3 damage effects on vegetation, which can be simply derived using ground-level O _3 and relative humidity (RH). Compared with O _3 damages to gross primary productivity (GPP _d ) derived from a process-based scheme over May to October in 2015–2018, the O _3 RH index shows spatial correlations of 0.59 in China, 0.62 in U.S., and 0.58 ( P < 0.01) in Europe, much higher than the correlations of 0.16, −0.22, and 0.24 ( P < 0.01) for AOT40. Meanwhile, the O _3 RH index shows temporal correlations of 0.73 in China, 0.82 in U.S, and 0.81 ( P < 0.01) in Europe with GPP _d , again higher than the correlations of 0.50, 0.67, and 0.79 ( P < 0.01) for AOT40. Analyses of O _3 RH reveal relatively stable trend of O _3 vegetation damages in eastern U.S. and western Europe, despite the long-term reductions in local O _3 pollution levels. Our study suggests the substitution of traditional exposure-based indexes such as AOT40 with O _3 RH for more reasonable assessments of O _3 ecological effects.

Keywords