Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust

Soil dust is a major driver of ice nucleation in clouds leading to precipitation. It consists largely of mineral particles with a small fraction of organic matter constituted mainly of remains of micro-organisms that participated in degrading plant debris before their own decay. Some micro-organisms...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: F. Conen, C. E. Morris, J. Leifeld, M. V. Yakutin, C. Alewell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2011-09-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/9643/2011/acp-11-9643-2011.pdf
id doaj-f2c57f7fe28244bdbde4e33bdf032d35
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f2c57f7fe28244bdbde4e33bdf032d352020-11-24T23:29:30ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242011-09-0111189643964810.5194/acp-11-9643-2011Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dustF. ConenC. E. MorrisJ. LeifeldM. V. YakutinC. AlewellSoil dust is a major driver of ice nucleation in clouds leading to precipitation. It consists largely of mineral particles with a small fraction of organic matter constituted mainly of remains of micro-organisms that participated in degrading plant debris before their own decay. Some micro-organisms have been shown to be much better ice nuclei than the most efficient soil mineral. Yet, current aerosol schemes in global climate models do not consider a difference between soil dust and mineral dust in terms of ice nucleation activity. Here, we show that particles from the clay and silt size fraction of four different soils naturally associated with 0.7 to 11.8 % organic carbon (w/w) can have up to four orders of magnitude more ice nucleation sites per unit mass active in the immersion freezing mode at −12 °C than montmorillonite, the nucleation properties of which are often used to represent those of mineral dusts in modelling studies. Most of this activity was lost after heat treatment. Removal of biological residues reduced ice nucleation activity to, or below that of montmorillonite. Desert soils, inherently low in organic content, are a large natural source of dust in the atmosphere. In contrast, agricultural land use is concentrated on fertile soils with much larger organic matter contents than found in deserts. It is currently estimated that the contribution of agricultural soils to the global dust burden is less than 20 %. Yet, these disturbed soils can contribute ice nuclei to the atmosphere of a very different and much more potent kind than mineral dusts.http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/9643/2011/acp-11-9643-2011.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Conen
C. E. Morris
J. Leifeld
M. V. Yakutin
C. Alewell
spellingShingle F. Conen
C. E. Morris
J. Leifeld
M. V. Yakutin
C. Alewell
Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet F. Conen
C. E. Morris
J. Leifeld
M. V. Yakutin
C. Alewell
author_sort F. Conen
title Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
title_short Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
title_full Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
title_fullStr Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
title_full_unstemmed Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
title_sort biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2011-09-01
description Soil dust is a major driver of ice nucleation in clouds leading to precipitation. It consists largely of mineral particles with a small fraction of organic matter constituted mainly of remains of micro-organisms that participated in degrading plant debris before their own decay. Some micro-organisms have been shown to be much better ice nuclei than the most efficient soil mineral. Yet, current aerosol schemes in global climate models do not consider a difference between soil dust and mineral dust in terms of ice nucleation activity. Here, we show that particles from the clay and silt size fraction of four different soils naturally associated with 0.7 to 11.8 % organic carbon (w/w) can have up to four orders of magnitude more ice nucleation sites per unit mass active in the immersion freezing mode at −12 °C than montmorillonite, the nucleation properties of which are often used to represent those of mineral dusts in modelling studies. Most of this activity was lost after heat treatment. Removal of biological residues reduced ice nucleation activity to, or below that of montmorillonite. Desert soils, inherently low in organic content, are a large natural source of dust in the atmosphere. In contrast, agricultural land use is concentrated on fertile soils with much larger organic matter contents than found in deserts. It is currently estimated that the contribution of agricultural soils to the global dust burden is less than 20 %. Yet, these disturbed soils can contribute ice nuclei to the atmosphere of a very different and much more potent kind than mineral dusts.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/9643/2011/acp-11-9643-2011.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fconen biologicalresiduesdefinetheicenucleationpropertiesofsoildust
AT cemorris biologicalresiduesdefinetheicenucleationpropertiesofsoildust
AT jleifeld biologicalresiduesdefinetheicenucleationpropertiesofsoildust
AT mvyakutin biologicalresiduesdefinetheicenucleationpropertiesofsoildust
AT calewell biologicalresiduesdefinetheicenucleationpropertiesofsoildust
_version_ 1725545351582056448