The global distribution of ammonia emissions from seabird colonies

  • S. N. Riddick
  • , U. Dragosits
  • , T. D. Blackall
  • , F. Daunt
  • , S. Wanless
  • , M. A. Sutton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

104 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Seabird colonies represent a significant source of atmospheric ammonia (NH 3) in remote maritime systems, producing a source of nitrogen that may encourage plant growth, alter terrestrial plant community composition and affect the surrounding marine ecosystem. To investigate seabird NH 3 emissions on a global scale, we developed a contemporary seabird database including a total seabird population of 261 million breeding pairs. We used this in conjunction with a bioenergetics model to estimate the mass of nitrogen excreted by all seabirds at each breeding colony. The results combined with the findings of mid-latitude field studies of volatilization rates estimate the global distribution of NH 3 emissions from seabird colonies on an annual basis. The largest uncertainty in our emission estimate concerns the potential temperature dependence of NH 3 emission. To investigate this we calculated and compared temperature independent emission estimates with a maximum feasible temperature dependent emission, based on the thermodynamic dissociation and solubility equilibria. Using the temperature independent approach, we estimate global NH 3 emissions from seabird colonies at 404 Gg NH 3 per year. By comparison, since most seabirds are located in relatively cold circumpolar locations, the thermodynamically dependent estimate is 136 Gg NH 3 per year. Actual global emissions are expected to be within these bounds, as other factors, such as non-linear interactions with water availability and surface infiltration, moderate the theoretical temperature response. Combining sources of error from temperature (±49%), seabird population estimates (±36%), variation in diet composition (±23%) and non-breeder attendance (±13%), gives a mid estimate with an overall uncertainty range of NH 3 emission from seabird colonies of 270 [97-442] Gg NH 3 per year. These emissions are environmentally relevant as they primarily occur as " hot-spots" in otherwise pristine environments with low anthropogenic emissions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)319-327
Number of pages9
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume55
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Aug 2012

Keywords

  • Bioenergetic modelling
  • Climate change
  • Coastal nitrogen
  • Emission map
  • Seabird colony
  • Temperature

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