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HERO ID
89493
Reference Type
Journal Article
Subtype
Review
Title
Atmospheric ammonia and ammonium transport in Europe and critical loads: A review
Author(s)
Ferm, M
Year
1998
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems
ISSN:
1385-1314
EISSN:
1573-0867
Volume
51
Issue
1
Page Numbers
5-17
Language
English
DOI
10.1023/a:1009780030477
Web of Science Id
WOS:000072785400002
Abstract
The atmosphere in Europe is polluted by easily available nitrogen (ammonium and nitrate) mainly from livestock (NH3), traffic (NOx) and stationary combustion sources (NOx). The nitrogen emission from various European sources decreases in the order: agriculture, road traffic, stationary sources and other mobile sources (including vehicular emissions from agriculture), with annual emissions of approximately 4.9, 2.7, 2.7 and 0.8 Mt N respec tively. The emissions have increased dramatically during the latest decades. In the atmosphere the pollutants are oxidised to more water soluble compounds that are washed out by clouds and eventually brought back to the earths surface again. Since ammonia is emitted in a highly water soluble form it will also to a substantial degree be dry deposited near the source. Ammonia is, however, the dominant basic compound in the atmosphere and will form salts with acidic gases. These salt particles can be transported long distances especially in the absence of clouds.
The deposition close to the source is substantial, but hard to estimate due to interaction with other pollutants. Far from the source the deposition of ammonium is on an annual average halved approximately every 400 km. This short transport distance and the substantial deposition near the source makes it possible for countries to control their ammonium deposition by decreasing their emissions, provided that there is no country with much higher emission in the direction of the prevailing wind trajectory. When the easily available nitrogen is deposited on natural ecosystems (lakes, forests), negative effect can occur. The effect is determined by the magnitude of the deposition and the type of ecosystems (its critical load for nitrogen). In order to reduce the negative effects by controlling the emissions in a cost-efficient way it Is necessary to use atmospheric transport models and critical loads.
Keywords
ammonium transport; atmospheric ammonium; emission; deposition
Conference Name
Scandinavian Association of Agricultural Scientists Seminar on Ammonia Emissions from Agriculture
Conference Location
Uppsala, Sweden
Conference Dates
May 23-24, 1996
Tags
IRIS
•
Ammonia
Literature Search – March 2012 (private)
Literature Search Results
•
Nitrate/Nitrite
Supplemental LitSearch Update 1600-2015
WoS
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