Abstract:
Between June and September large amounts of
biomass burning aerosol are released into the atmosphere
from agricultural fires in central and southern Africa. Recent
studies have suggested that this plume is carried westward
over the Atlantic Ocean at altitudes between 2 and
4 km and then northward with the monsoon flow at low levels
to increase the atmospheric aerosol load over coastal
cities in southern West Africa (SWA), thereby exacerbating
air pollution problems. However, the processes by which
these fire emissions are transported into the planetary boundary
layer (PBL) are still unclear. One potential factor is the
large-scale subsidence related to the southern branch of the
monsoon Hadley cell over the tropical Atlantic. Here we
use convection-permitting model simulations with COSMOART
to investigate for the first time the contribution of downward
mixing induced by clouds, a process we refer to as
downward cloud venting in contrast to the more common
process of upward transport from a polluted PBL. Based
on a monthly climatology, model simulations compare satisfactory
with wind fields from reanalysis data, cloud observations,
and satellite-retrieved carbon monoxide (CO) mixing
ratio. For a case study on 2 July 2016, modelled clouds
and rainfall show overall good agreement with Spinning Enhanced
Visible and InfraRed Imager (SEVIRI) cloud products
and Global Precipitation Measurement Integrated MultisatellitE
Retrievals (GPM-IMERG) rainfall estimates. However,
there is a tendency for the model to produce too much clouds and rainfall over the Gulf of Guinea. Using the CO
dispersion as an indicator for the biomass burning plume, we
identify individual mixing events south of the coast of Côte
d’Ivoire due to midlevel convective clouds injecting parts of
the biomass burning plume into the PBL. Idealized tracer experiments
suggest that around 15% of the CO mass from
the 2–4 km layer is mixed below 1 km within 2 d over the
Gulf of Guinea and that the magnitude of the cloud venting is
modulated by the underlying sea surface temperatures. There
is even stronger vertical mixing when the biomass burning
plume reaches land due to daytime heating and a deeper
PBL. In that case, the long-range-transported biomass burning
plume is mixed with local anthropogenic emissions. Future
work should provide more robust statistics on the downward
cloud venting effect over the Gulf of Guinea and include
aspects of aerosol deposition.