Sources of organic ice nucleating particles in soils
Soil organic matter (SOM) may be a significant source of atmospheric ice nucleating particles (INPs), especially of those active > −15 °C. However, due to both a lack of investigations and the complexity of the SOM itself, the identities of these INPs remain unknown. To more comprehensi...
| 出版年: | Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
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| 主要な著者: | , , , , , , |
| フォーマット: | 論文 |
| 言語: | 英語 |
| 出版事項: |
Copernicus Publications
2016-06-01
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| オンライン・アクセス: | https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/7195/2016/acp-16-7195-2016.pdf |
| 要約: | Soil organic matter (SOM) may be a significant source of atmospheric ice
nucleating particles (INPs), especially of those active
> −15 °C. However, due to both a lack of investigations and the
complexity of the SOM itself, the identities of these INPs remain unknown. To
more comprehensively characterize organic INPs we tested locally
representative soils in Wyoming and Colorado for total organic INPs, INPs in
the heat-labile fraction, ice nucleating (IN) bacteria, IN fungi, IN fulvic
and humic acids, IN plant tissue, and ice nucleation by monolayers of
aliphatic alcohols. All soils contained ≈ 10<sup>6</sup> to ≈ 5 × 10<sup>7</sup> INPs g<sup>−1</sup> dry soil active at −10 °C.
Removal of SOM with H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> removed ≥ 99 % of INPs active
> −18 °C (the limit of testing), while heating of soil
suspensions to 105 °C showed that labile INPs increasingly
predominated > −12 °C and comprised ≥ 90 % of INPs
active > −9 °C. Papain protease, which inactivates IN proteins
produced by the fungus <i>Mortierella alpina</i>, common in the region's
soils, lowered INPs active at ≥ −11 °C by ≥ 75 %
in two arable soils and in sagebrush shrubland soil. By contrast, lysozyme,
which digests bacterial cell walls, only reduced INPs active at ≥ −7.5 or ≥ −6 °C, depending on the soil. The known IN
bacteria were not detected in any soil, using PCR for the <i>ina</i> gene
that codes for the active protein. We directly isolated and photographed two
INPs from soil, using repeated cycles of freeze testing and subdivision of
droplets of dilute soil suspensions; they were complex and apparently organic
entities. Ice nucleation activity was not affected by digestion of Proteinase
K-susceptible proteins or the removal of entities composed of fulvic and
humic acids, sterols, or aliphatic alcohol monolayers. Organic INPs active
colder than −10 to −12 °C were resistant to all investigations
other than heat, oxidation with H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, and, for some, digestion with
papain. They may originate from decomposing plant material, microbial
biomass,
and/or the humin component of the SOM. In the case of the latter then they are most
likely to be a carbohydrate. Reflecting the diversity of the SOM itself, soil
INPs have a range of sources which occur with differing relative abundances.</p> |
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| ISSN: | 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
