Multiscale CO budget estimates across South America: quantifying local
sources and long range transport
Abstract
South America is a large continent situated mostly in the Southern
Hemisphere (SH) with complex topography and diverse emissions sources.
However, the atmospheric chemistry of this region has been historically
understudied. Here, we employ the Multi-Scale Infrastructure for
Chemistry and Aerosols, a novel global circulation model with regional
refinement capabilities and full chemistry, to explore the sources and
distribution of the carbon monoxide (CO) tropospheric column in South
America during 2019, and also to assess the effect that South American
primary emissions have over the rest of the world. Most of the CO over
South America can be explained either by NMVOC secondary chemical
production or by biomass burning emissions, with biomass burning as the
main explanation for the variability in CO. Biomass burning in Central
Africa is a relevant contributor to CO in all of the continent,
including the southern tip. Biogenic emissions play a dual role in CO
concentrations: they provide volatile organic compounds that contribute
to the secondary CO production, but they also destroy OH, which limits
the chemical production and destruction of CO. As a net effect, the
lifetime of CO is extended to ~120 days on average over
the Amazon, while still being in the range of 30-60 days in the rest of
South America.