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@ARTICLE{Kloss:894309,
author = {Kloss, Corinna and Sellitto, Pasquale and von Hobe, Marc
and Berthet, Gwenaël and Smale, Dan and Krysztofiak,
Gisèle and Xue, Chaoyang and Qiu, Chenxi and Jégou,
Fabrice and Ouerghemmi, Inès and Legras, Bernard},
title = {{A}ustralian {F}ires 2019–2020: {T}ropospheric and
{S}tratospheric {P}ollution {T}hroughout the {W}hole {F}ire
{S}eason},
journal = {Frontiers in Environmental Science},
volume = {9},
issn = {2296-665X},
address = {Lausanne},
publisher = {Frontiers Media},
reportid = {FZJ-2021-03169},
pages = {652024},
year = {2021},
abstract = {The historically large and severe wildfires in Australia
from September 2019 to March 2020 are known to have injected
a smoke plume into the stratosphere around New Year, due to
pyro-cumulonimbus (pyro-Cb) activity, that was subsequently
distributed throughout the Southern Hemisphere (SH). We show
with satellite, ground based remote sensing, and in situ
observations that the fires before New Year, had already a
substantial impact on the SH atmosphere, starting as early
as September 2019, with subsequent long-range transport of
trace gas plumes in the upper-troposphere. Airborne in situ
measurements above Southern Argentina in November 2019 show
elevated CO mixing ratios at an altitude of 11 km and can be
traced back using FLEXPART trajectories to the Australian
fires in mid-November 2019. Ground based solar-FTS (Fourier
Transform Spectroscopy) observations of biomass burning
tracers CO, HCN and C2H6 at Lauder, South Island, New
Zealand show enhanced tropospheric columns already starting
in September 2019. In MLS observations averaged over
30°–60°S, enhanced CO mixing ratios compared to previous
years become visible in late October 2019 only at and below
the 147 hPa pressure level. Peak differences are found with
satellite and ground-based observations for all altitude
levels in the Southern Hemisphere in January. With still
increased aerosol values following the Ulawun eruption in
2019, averaged satellite observations show no clear
stratospheric and upper-tropospheric aerosol enhancements
from the Australian fires, before the pyro-Cb events at the
end of December 2019. However, with the clear enhancement of
fire tracers, we suggest the period September to December
2019 (prior to the major pyro-Cb events) should be taken
into account in terms of fire pollutant emissions when
studying the impact of the Australian fires on the SH
atmosphere.},
cin = {IEK-7},
ddc = {333.7},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-7-20101013},
pnm = {2112 - Climate Feedbacks (POF4-211)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-2112},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
UT = {WOS:000679000100001},
doi = {10.3389/fenvs.2021.652024},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/894309},
}