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Nitrogen burden from atmospheric deposition in East Asian oceans in 2010 based on high-resolution regional numerical modeling

Syuichi Itahashi, Kentaro Hayashi, Shigenobu Takeda, Yu Umezawa, Kazuhide Matsuda, Tatsuya Sakurai, Itsushi Uno

2021Environmental Pollution20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

East Asian oceans are possibly affected by a high nitrogen (N) burden because of the intense anthropogenic emissions in this region. Based on high-resolution regional chemical transport modeling with horizontal grid scales of 36 and 12 km, we investigated the N burden into East Asian oceans via atmospheric deposition in 2010. We found a high N burden of 2–9 kg N ha−1 yr−1 over the Yellow Sea, East China Sea (ECS), and Sea of Japan. Emissions over East Asia were dominated by ammonia (NH3) over land and nitrogen oxides (NOx) over oceans, and N deposition was dominated by reduced N over most land and open ocean, whereas it was dominated by oxidized N over marginal seas and desert areas. The verified numerical modeling identified that the following processes were quantitatively important over East Asian oceans: the dry deposition of nitric acid (HNO3), NH3, and coarse-mode (aerodynamic diameter greater than 2.5 μm) NO3−, and wet deposition of fine-mode (aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm) NO3− and NH4+. The relative importance of the dry deposition of coarse-mode NO3− was higher over open ocean. The estimated N deposition to the whole ECS was 390 Gg N yr−1; this is comparable to the discharge from the Yangtze River to the ECS, indicating the significant contribution of atmospheric deposition. Based on the high-resolution modeling over the ECS, a tendency of high deposition in the western ECS and low deposition in the eastern ECS was found, and a variety of deposition processes were estimated. The dry deposition of coarse-mode NO3− and wet deposition of fine-mode NH4+ were the main factors, and the wet deposition of fine-mode NO3− over the northeastern ECS and wet deposition of coarse-mode NO3− over the southeastern ECS were also found to be significant processes determining N deposition over the ECS.

Topics & Concepts

Deposition (geology)East AsiaEnvironmental scienceChemical transport modelNitrogenNOxAtmospheric sciencesClimatologyTroposphereEnvironmental chemistryGeologyChemistryChinaGeographyCombustionGeomorphologyArchaeologyOrganic chemistrySedimentAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsMarine and coastal ecosystemsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics