Space Travel News  
WOOD PILE
The Amazon Rainforest - A Cloud Factory

A self-contained biogeochemical reactor: The Amazon ecosystem produces organic aerosol particles, which serve as the condensation nuclei for water vapour. They therefore trigger the formation of clouds and precipitation, driving the hydrological cycle. Image: MPI for Chemistry
by Staff Writers
Mainz, Germany (SPX) Sep 23, 2010
The air above the Amazon rainforest is cleaner than almost anywhere else on earth. This allows climate scientists to investigate cloud condensation under natural conditions.

The results of this study may serve as a point of reference for future analyses of anthropogenic influence on cloud evolution and precipitation. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry have now made a valuable contribution to this.

Together with international partners, they have, for the first time, used scanning electron microscopy and mass spectrometry during the rainy season to characterise the chemical composition of aerosols, tiny suspended particles in the air above the Amazon rainforest.

Submicron particles have a diameter that is smaller than a thousandth of a millimetre and serve as cloud condensation nuclei. They consist of 85 % secondary organic aerosol components. These are formed from volatile organic compounds which are released by the forest ecosystem and which can be converted to low-volatile particles through photochemical reactions and condensate. The remaining tenth of the submicron particle primarily consists of salts, minerals and soot, transported from the Atlantic and Africa by the winds.

A self-contained hydrological cycle above the Amazon rainforest
More than 80 % of supermicron particles, which have a diameter of more than a micrometre, are made up of primary biological aerosol material, such as fungal spores, pollen and plant debris, and are directly released into the air from the rainforest. They serve as ice nuclei and are very important for the evolution of precipitation.

The fact that aerosols above the Amazon rainforest are nearly completely of biogenic origin tells the scientists a lot about the ecosystem. "The Brazilian rainforest during the rainy season can be described as a bioreactor", says Ulrich Poschl, who played a leading part in the study.

Water vapour rises from the forest, compensating on aerosols. These are then transported up to a height of 18 kilometres. Water droplets and ice crystals grow in the clouds thus formed until they fall to the ground again as precipitation. Part of the precipitation evaporates and the rest irrigates the Amazon flora. The plants, while growing, continue to release organic material into the atmosphere, on which new clouds grow.

The cloud evolution above the Amazon is limited by the abundance of aerosols
The findings about the natural process of cloud condensation provide scientists with information about what differentiates it from the cloud condensation provoked by human activities.

"We are already able to say that the number of cloud droplets over the Amazon rainforest is aerosol-limited, which means that it depends on the number of aerosol particles which is released by the ecosystem", explains Ulrich Poschl. In densely populated areas and in the Amazon during the dry season, where exhaust fumes from traffic, industry and slash-and-burn agriculture saturate the air with aerosols, it instead depends on the velocity of the updraft which transports the particles upwards.

The scientists want to continue to investigate the atmosphere above the Amazon rainforest in the next years. For this purpose, they are now erecting a 300 metre high observational tower near Manaus, Brazil, where the current studies were carried out. "There, we want to conduct further long-term and comprehensive observations", says Ulrich Poschl.

Besides the aerosols, the scientists also want to look closer at the carbon and nitrogen cycles. "If we can better understand the natural ecosystem of the rainforest, we will be able to describe the influence that we humans exert on the climate more reliably."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
Forestry News - Global and Local News, Science and Application



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WOOD PILE
Pristine Rainforests Are Biogeochemical Reactors
Raleigh NC (SPX) Sep 17, 2010
A multinational team that includes a North Carolina State University researcher has found another piece of the atmospheric puzzle surrounding the effects of aerosol particles on climate change. Their findings will contribute to our ability to more accurately measure human impact on climate, and to determine how much pollution may "mask" the actual rate of climate change. Dr. Markus Petters ... read more







WOOD PILE
LockMart And ATK Athena Launch Vehicles Selected As A NASA Launch Services Provider

Sirius XM-5 Satellite Delivered To Baikonur For October Launch

Emerging Technologies May Fuel Revolutionary Launcher

EUMETSAT Chooses Arianespace To Launch Metop-C

WOOD PILE
NASA tests (cramped) Mars-type rovers in Arizona desert

Team Restoring Mars Orbiter After Reboot

Strong Robotic Arm Extends From Next Mars Rover

105 Days In Isolation - And Counting - For 400 More

WOOD PILE
Watch Out For The Super Harvest Moon

Water on Moon is bad news for China's lunar telescope

New Insights Into The Moon's Rich Geologic Complexity

Astrium Investigates Automatic Landing At The Moon's South Pole

WOOD PILE
The Longest Space Mission

Uranus may have been cosmic 'pinball'

Flying To The Edge

Picture-Perfect Pluto Practice

WOOD PILE
This Planet Smells Funny

Scientists looking to spot alien oceans

Deadly Tides Mean Early Exit For Hot Jupiters

Can We Spot Volcanoes On Alien Worlds

WOOD PILE
U.K. predicts 'spaceplane' in 10 years

Successful Static Testing Of L 110 Liquid Core Stage Of GSLV 3

Danish rocketeers abort launch attempt

Technical glitch grounds homemade Danish rocket

WOOD PILE
Space-Age Device To Deliver More Efficient Health Care On Earth And Above

China Launches New Satellite

China's Space Programme Gears Up For Missions To Moon And Mars

China's Second Lunar Probe Chang'e-2 To Reach Lunar Orbit Faster Than Chang'e-1

WOOD PILE
Scientists find 'rubble pile' asteroids

Avoiding An Asteroid Collision

Amateur Astronomers Open Potential Lab In Outer Space For Planetary Scientists

Two asteroids to pass close to Earth, but won't hit: NASA


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement