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Life Sciences

Nitrogen

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Formaldehyde And Nitrogen Dioxide In Smoke Plumes From Australia's Black Saturday Fires, Emma Young, Clare Paton-Walsh Jan 2010

Formaldehyde And Nitrogen Dioxide In Smoke Plumes From Australia's Black Saturday Fires, Emma Young, Clare Paton-Walsh

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

The ‘Black Saturday’ fires were a series of devastating bushfires that burned across Victoria, Australia, during February 2009. The smoke plume from Saturday the 7th February, the worst day of the fires, separated from subsequent emissions and persisted for several weeks, providing the opportunity to track the changing composition of the smoke plume as it aged. In this study we have used satellite data from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) and the Atmospheric InfraRed Sounder (AIRS) to characterise the emissions of formaldehyde and nitrogen dioxide from the fires. Emission ratios with respect to carbon monoxide are determined for formaldehyde (0.017 …


Development And Application Of A System For The Analysis Of Atmospheric, Water And Sediment Nitrogen And Carbon, Ann Stavert, Stephen R. Wilson, Dianne F. Jolley Jan 2009

Development And Application Of A System For The Analysis Of Atmospheric, Water And Sediment Nitrogen And Carbon, Ann Stavert, Stephen R. Wilson, Dianne F. Jolley

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Eutrophication and climate change, key environmental concerns, are both linked to the carbon and nitrogen cycles hence the improved understanding of these cycles is essential. Currently, there is no system that simultaneously measures the fluxes of the three key gas phase products of nitrogen and carbon cycling (CO2, CH4 and N2O) in submerged ecosystems with hourly time resolution. A “Lake-in-a-box” (mesocosm) was developed in the laboratory which allowed the monitoring of key components of the carbon and nitrogen cycles within the air, water and sediments. The approach is automated, simple and time efficient and novel in its ability to examine …


Climate Change Manipulations Show Antarctic Flora Is More Strongly Affected By Elevated Nutrients Than Water, J. Wasley, Sharon A. Robinson, C. E. Lovelock, M. Popp Jul 2006

Climate Change Manipulations Show Antarctic Flora Is More Strongly Affected By Elevated Nutrients Than Water, J. Wasley, Sharon A. Robinson, C. E. Lovelock, M. Popp

Faculty of Science - Papers (Archive)

Climate change is expected to affect the high latitudes first and most severely, rendering Antarctica one of the most significant baseline environments for the study of global climate change. The indirect effects of climate warming, including changes to the availability of key environmental resources, such as water and nutrients, are likely to have a greater impact upon continental Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems than the effects of fluctuations in temperature alone. To investigate the likely impacts of a wetter climate on Antarctic terrestrial communities a multi-season, manipulative field experiment was conducted in the floristically important Windmill Islands region of East Antarctica. Four …