Interannual changes in atmospheric oxidation over forests determined from space

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Abstract

The hydroxyl radical (OH) is the central oxidant in Earth’s troposphere, but its temporal variability is poorly understood. We combine 2012–2020 satellite-based isoprene and formaldehyde measurements to identify coherent OH changes over temperate and tropical forests with attribution to emission trends, biotic stressors, and climate. We identify a multiyear OH decrease over the Southeast United States and show that with increasingly hot/dry summers the regional chemistry could become even less oxidizing depending on competing temperature/drought impacts on isoprene. Furthermore, while global mean OH decreases during El Niño, we show that near-field effects over tropical rainforests can alternate between high/low OH anomalies due to opposing fire and biogenic emission impacts. Results provide insights into how atmospheric oxidation will evolve with changing emissions and climate.

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Shutter, J. D., Millet, D. B., Wells, K. C., Payne, V. H., Nowlan, C. R., & Abad, G. G. (2024). Interannual changes in atmospheric oxidation over forests determined from space. Science Advances, 10(20). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adn1115

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