Tropical tropospheric ozone observed in
Thailand
Pakpong Pochanart, J. Kreasuwun, P. Sukasem, W. Geeratithadaniyom, M. S. Tabucanon, J. Hirokawa, Y. Kajii, H. Akimoto
Atmospheric Environment,
35 (15), 2657-2668, 2001.
The mixing ratios
of surface ozone at two rural/remote sites in Thailand, Inthanon and
Srinakarin, have been measured continuously for the first time. Almost identical
seasonal variations of O3 with dry season maximum and a wet season minimum with
a large seasonal amplitude are observed at both sites during 1996-1998. At
Inthanon, the monthly averaged O3 mixing ratios range 9-55 ppb, with the annual
average of 27 ppb. The ozone mixing ratios at Srinakarin are in the similar
range, 9-45 ppb with annual average of 28 ppb. Based on trajectory analysis of
O3 data at Inthanon, the long-range transport of O3 under Asian monsoon regime
could primarily explain the low O3 mixing ratios of 13 ppb in clean marine air
mass from Indian Ocean during wet season but only partly explain the relatively
low O3 mixing ratios, 26 ppb or less, in continental air mass from northeast
Asia either in wet or dry season. The highest O3 mixing ratios are found in air
masses transported within Southeast Asia, averaged 46 ppb in dry season. The
high O3 mixing ratios during the dry season are suggested to be significantly
due to the local/sub-regional scale O3 production triggered by biomass burning
in Southeast Asia rather than long-range transport effect.