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Smoke-Driven Changes in Photosynthetically Active Radiation During the U.S. Agricultural Growing Season
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  • Kimberley Anne Corwin,
  • Chelsea Corr,
  • Jesse Burkhardt,
  • Emily V Fischer
Kimberley Anne Corwin
Colorado State University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Chelsea Corr
Springfield College
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Jesse Burkhardt
Colorado State University
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Emily V Fischer
Colorado State University
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Abstract

Wildfire smoke frequently blankets the U.S. throughout the agricultural growing season, and this will likely increase with climate change. Studies of smoke impacts have largely focused on air quality and human health; however, understanding smoke’s impact on photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) is essential for predicting how smoke affects plant growth. We compare surface shortwave irradiance and diffuse fraction (DF) on smoke-impacted and smoke-free days from 2006-2020 using data from multifilter rotating shadowband radiometers at ten U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) UV-B Monitoring and Research Program stations and smoke plume locations from operational satellite products. On average, 20% of growing season days are smoke-impacted, but smoke prevalence increases over time (r = 0.60, p < 0.05). Smoke presence peaks in the mid- to late growing season (i.e., July, August), particularly over the northern Rocky Mountains, Great Plains, and Midwest. We find an increase in the distribution of PAR DF on smoke-impacted days, with larger increases at lower cloud fractions. On clear-sky days, daily average PAR DF increases by 10 percentage points when smoke is present. Spectral analysis of clear-sky days shows smoke increases DF (average: +45%) and decreases total irradiance (average: -6%) across all six wavelengths measured from 368-870 nm. Optical depth measurements from ground and satellite observations both indicate that spectral DF increases and total spectral irradiance decreases with increasing smoke plume optical depth (i.e., plume thickness). Our analysis provides a foundation for understanding smoke’s impact on PAR, which carries implications for agricultural crop productivity under a changing climate.