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Featured researches published by Ben Langford.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Nitrogen management is essential to prevent tropical oil palm plantations from causing ground-level ozone pollution

C. N. Hewitt; A. R. MacKenzie; P. Di Carlo; C. Di Marco; J. R. Dorsey; M. J. Evans; D. Fowler; Martin Gallagher; J. R. Hopkins; C. E. Jones; Ben Langford; James Lee; Alastair C. Lewis; S. F. Lim; J. B. McQuaid; Pawel K. Misztal; Sarah Moller; Paul S. Monks; E. Nemitz; D. E. Oram; Susan M. Owen; Gavin Phillips; Thomas A. M. Pugh; J. A. Pyle; C. E. Reeves; James Ryder; Jambery Siong; U. Skiba; D. Stewart

More than half the worlds rainforest has been lost to agriculture since the Industrial Revolution. Among the most widespread tropical crops is oil palm (Elaeis guineensis): global production now exceeds 35 million tonnes per year. In Malaysia, for example, 13% of land area is now oil palm plantation, compared with 1% in 1974. There are enormous pressures to increase palm oil production for food, domestic products, and, especially, biofuels. Greater use of palm oil for biofuel production is predicated on the assumption that palm oil is an “environmentally friendly” fuel feedstock. Here we show, using measurements and models, that oil palm plantations in Malaysia directly emit more oxides of nitrogen and volatile organic compounds than rainforest. These compounds lead to the production of ground-level ozone (O3), an air pollutant that damages human health, plants, and materials, reduces crop productivity, and has effects on the Earths climate. Our measurements show that, at present, O3 concentrations do not differ significantly over rainforest and adjacent oil palm plantation landscapes. However, our model calculations predict that if concentrations of oxides of nitrogen in Borneo are allowed to reach those currently seen over rural North America and Europe, ground-level O3 concentrations will reach 100 parts per billion (109) volume (ppbv) and exceed levels known to be harmful to human health. Our study provides an early warning of the urgent need to develop policies that manage nitrogen emissions if the detrimental effects of palm oil production on air quality and climate are to be avoided.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

Meteorology, air quality, and health in London: The ClearfLo project

Sylvia I. Bohnenstengel; Stephen E. Belcher; A. C. Aiken; J. D. Allan; G. Allen; Asan Bacak; Thomas J. Bannan; Janet F. Barlow; David C. S. Beddows; William J. Bloss; Am Booth; Charles Chemel; Omduth Coceal; C. Di Marco; Manvendra K. Dubey; K.H. Faloon; Zoe L. Fleming; Markus Furger; Johanna K. Gietl; R. Graves; David Green; C. S. B. Grimmond; Christos Halios; Jacqueline F. Hamilton; Roy M. Harrison; Mathew R. Heal; Dwayne E. Heard; Carole Helfter; Scott C. Herndon; R.E. Holmes

AbstractAir quality and heat are strong health drivers, and their accurate assessment and forecast are important in densely populated urban areas. However, the sources and processes leading to high concentrations of main pollutants, such as ozone, nitrogen dioxide, and fine and coarse particulate matter, in complex urban areas are not fully understood, limiting our ability to forecast air quality accurately. This paper introduces the Clean Air for London (ClearfLo; www.clearflo.ac.uk) project’s interdisciplinary approach to investigate the processes leading to poor air quality and elevated temperatures.Within ClearfLo, a large multi-institutional project funded by the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), integrated measurements of meteorology and gaseous, and particulate composition/loading within the atmosphere of London, United Kingdom, were undertaken to understand the processes underlying poor air quality. Long-term measurement infrastructure installed at multiple levels (street and eleva...


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2011

Effects of land use on surface–atmosphere exchanges of trace gases and energy in Borneo: comparing fluxes over oil palm plantations and a rainforest

D. Fowler; E. Nemitz; Pawel K. Misztal; Chiara Di Marco; U. Skiba; James Ryder; Carole Helfter; J. Neil Cape; Susan M. Owen; J. R. Dorsey; Martin Gallagher; Mhairi Coyle; Gavin Phillips; Brian Davison; Ben Langford; Rob MacKenzie; Jennifer Muller; Jambery Siong; Cesare Dari-Salisburgo; Piero Di Carlo; Eleonora Aruffo; Franco Giammaria; J. A. Pyle; C. Nicholas Hewitt

This paper reports measurements of land–atmosphere fluxes of sensible and latent heat, momentum, CO2, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), NO, NO2, N2O and O3 over a 30 m high rainforest canopy and a 12 m high oil palm plantation in the same region of Sabah in Borneo between April and July 2008. The daytime maximum CO2 flux to the two canopies differs by approximately a factor of 2, 1200 mg C m−2 h−1 for the oil palm and 700 mg C m−2 h−1 for the rainforest, with the oil palm plantation showing a substantially greater quantum efficiency. Total VOC emissions are also larger over the oil palm than over the rainforest by a factor of 3. Emissions of isoprene from the oil palm canopy represented 80 per cent of the VOC emissions and exceeded those over the rainforest in similar light and temperature conditions by on average a factor of 5. Substantial emissions of estragole (1-allyl-4-methoxybenzene) from the oil palm plantation were detected and no trace of this VOC was detected in or above the rainforest. Deposition velocities for O3 to the rainforest were a factor of 2 larger than over oil palm. Emissions of nitrous oxide were larger from the soils of the oil palm plantation than from the soils of the rainforest by approximately 25 per cent. It is clear from the measurements that the large change in the species composition generated by replacing rainforest with oil palm leads to profound changes in the net exchange of most of the trace gases measured, and thus on the chemical composition of the boundary layer over these surfaces.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2011

The atmospheric chemistry of trace gases and particulate matter emitted by different land uses in Borneo

A. R. MacKenzie; Ben Langford; Thomas A. M. Pugh; N. H. Robinson; Pawel K. Misztal; Dwayne E. Heard; James Lee; Alastair C. Lewis; C. E. Jones; J. R. Hopkins; Gavin Phillips; Paul S. Monks; A. Karunaharan; K. E. Hornsby; V. Nicolas-Perea; Hugh Coe; A. M. Gabey; Martin Gallagher; L. K. Whalley; P. M. Edwards; M. J. Evans; Daniel Stone; Trevor Ingham; R. Commane; Kate Furneaux; J. B. McQuaid; E. Nemitz; Yap Kok Seng; D. Fowler; J. A. Pyle

We report measurements of atmospheric composition over a tropical rainforest and over a nearby oil palm plantation in Sabah, Borneo. The primary vegetation in each of the two landscapes emits very different amounts and kinds of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), resulting in distinctive VOC fingerprints in the atmospheric boundary layer for both landscapes. VOCs over the Borneo rainforest are dominated by isoprene and its oxidation products, with a significant additional contribution from monoterpenes. Rather than consuming the main atmospheric oxidant, OH, these high concentrations of VOCs appear to maintain OH, as has been observed previously over Amazonia. The boundary-layer characteristics and mixing ratios of VOCs observed over the Borneo rainforest are different to those measured previously over Amazonia. Compared with the Bornean rainforest, air over the oil palm plantation contains much more isoprene, monoterpenes are relatively less important, and the flower scent, estragole, is prominent. Concentrations of nitrogen oxides are greater above the agro-industrial oil palm landscape than over the rainforest, and this leads to changes in some secondary pollutant mixing ratios (but not, currently, differences in ozone). Secondary organic aerosol over both landscapes shows a significant contribution from isoprene. Primary biological aerosol dominates the super-micrometre aerosol over the rainforest and is likely to be sensitive to land-use change, since the fungal source of the bioaerosol is closely linked to above-ground biodiversity.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2009

Can a global model chemical mechanism reproduce NO, NO2, and O3 measurements above a tropical rainforest?

R. C. Pike; James Lee; P. J. Young; Sarah Moller; G. D. Carver; X. Yang; Pawel K. Misztal; Ben Langford; D. Stewart; C. E. Reeves; C. N. Hewitt; J. A. Pyle

A cross-platform field campaign, OP3, was conducted in the state of Sabah in Malaysian Borneo between April and July of 2008. Among the suite of observations recorded, the campaign included measurements of NOx and O3 crucial outputs of any model chemistry mechanism. We describe the measurements of these species made from both the ground site and aircraft. We examine the output from the global model p-TOMCAT at two resolutions for this location during the April campaign period. The models exhibit reasonable ability in capturing the NOx diurnal cycle, but ozone is overestimated. We use a box model containing the same chemical mechanism to explore the weaknesses in the global model and the ability of the simplified global model chemical mechanism to capture the chemistry at the rainforest site. We achieve a good fit to the data for all three species (NO, NO2, and O3), though the model is much more sensitive to changes in the treatment of physical processes than to changes in the chemical mechanism. Indeed, without some parameterization of the nighttime boundary layer-free troposphere mixing, a time dependent box model will not reproduce the observations. The final simulation uses this mixing parameterization for NO and NO2 but not O 3, as determined by the vertical structure of each species, and matches the measurements well.


Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts | 2016

A Review of Stereochemical Implications in the Generation of Secondary Organic Aerosol from Isoprene Oxidation

James M. Cash; Mathew R. Heal; Ben Langford; Julia Drewer

The atmospheric reactions leading to the generation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) from the oxidation of isoprene are generally assumed to produce only racemic mixtures, but aspects of the chemical reactions suggest this may not be the case. In this review, the stereochemical outcomes of published isoprene-degradation mechanisms contributing to high amounts of SOA are evaluated. Despite evidence suggesting isoprene first-generation oxidation products do not contribute to SOA directly, this review suggests the stereochemistry of first-generation products may be important because their stereochemical configurations may be retained through to the second-generation products which form SOA. Specifically, due to the stereochemistry of epoxide ring-opening mechanisms, the outcome of the reactions involving epoxydiols of isoprene (IEPOX), methacrylic acid epoxide (MAE) and hydroxymethylmethyl-α-lactone (HMML) are, in principle, stereospecific which indicates the stereochemistry is predefined from first-generation precursors. The products from these three epoxide intermediates oligomerise to form macromolecules which are proposed to form chiral structures within the aerosol and are considered to be the largest contributors to SOA. If conditions in the atmosphere such as pH, aerosol water content, relative humidity, pre-existing aerosol, aerosol coatings and aerosol cation/anion content (and other) variables acting on the reactions leading to SOA affect the tacticity (arrangement of chiral centres) in the SOA then they may influence its physical properties, for example its hygroscopicity. Chamber studies of SOA formation from isoprene encompass particular sets of controlled conditions of these variables. It may therefore be important to consider stereochemistry when upscaling from chamber study data to predictions of SOA yields across the range of ambient atmospheric conditions. Experiments analysing the stereochemistry of the reactions under varying conditions of the above variables would help elucidate whether there is stereoselectivity in SOA formation from isoprene and if the rates of SOA formation are affected.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

A study of the impact of land use change in Borneo on atmospheric composition using a global model

N. J. Warwick; A. T. Archibald; Kirsti Ashworth; J. R. Dorsey; P. M. Edwards; Dwayne E. Heard; Ben Langford; James Lee; Pawel K. Misztal; J. L. K. Whalley; J. A. Pyle

A high resolution version of the Cambridge p-TOMCAT model has been used to analyse results from the recent NERC-funded OP3 measurement campaign in Borneo. By using the chemical transport model at 50 km resolution, we have begun to understand the impact of emissions and other physical processes on regional chemistry. In particular, we have run several model scenarios looking at the potential impact of land use change of forest to oil palm in Borneo, and the corresponding change in isoprene emissions, on local and regional atmospheric composition. Oil palm is one of the World’s most rapidly expanding equatorial crops, with Indonesia and Malaysia being the two largest producing countries. Several model emission scenarios are run for the OP3 measurement period, including emissions from global datasets and local flux measurements. Isoprene fluxes observed during OP3 at a forest site were considerably less than fluxes based on the global GEIA dataset. Using the OP3 observed fluxes in the model substantially improved the comparison between modelled and observed isoprene mixing ratios, and had a significant impact on modeled O3 and OH over Borneo. Further model scenarios performed show that replacing forest with oil palm has the potential to significantly alter the atmospheric oxidizing capacity over Borneo.


Atmospheric Environment | 2018

Seasonal fluxes of carbon monoxide from an intensively grazed grassland in Scotland

N. Cowan; C. Helfter; Ben Langford; Mhairi Coyle; P. Levy; J. Moxley; I. Simmons; Sarah R. Leeson; E. Nemitz; U. Skiba

Fluxes of carbon monoxide (CO) were measured using a fast-response quantum cascade laser absorption spectrometer and the eddy covariance method at a long-term intensively grazed grassland in southern Scotland. Measurements lasted 20 months from April 2016 to November 2017, during which normal agricultural activities continued. Observed fluxes followed a regular diurnal cycle, peaking at midday and returning to values near zero during the night, with occasional uptake observed. CO fluxes correlated well with the meteorological variables of solar radiation, soil temperature and soil moisture content. Using a general additive model (GAM) we were able to gap fill CO fluxes and estimate annual fluxes of 0.38 ± 0.046 and 0.35 ± 0.045 g C m−2 y−1g C m−2 y−1 for 2016 and 2017, respectively. If the CO fluxes reported in this study are representative of UK grasslands, then national annual emissions could be expected to be in the order of 61.91 (54.3–69.5) Gg, which equates to 3.8% (3.4–4.3%) of the current national inventory total.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

Particulate matter, air quality and climate: lessons learned and future needs

S. Fuzzi; Urs Baltensperger; Kenneth S. Carslaw; S. Decesari; H. A. C. Denier van der Gon; M. C. Facchini; D. Fowler; Ilan Koren; Ben Langford; Ulrike Lohmann; E. Nemitz; Spyros N. Pandis; Ilona Riipinen; Yinon Rudich; M. Schaap; Jay G. Slowik; D. V. Spracklen; E. Vignati; Martin Wild; Martin L. Williams; Stefania Gilardoni


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

Evidence for a significant proportion of secondary organic aerosol from isoprene above a maritime tropical forest

N. H. Robinson; J. F. Hamilton; J. D. Allan; Ben Langford; D. E. Oram; Qi Chen; Kenneth S. Docherty; Delphine K. Farmer; Jose L. Jimenez; Manus W. Ward; C. N. Hewitt; Mark H. Barley; Michael E. Jenkin; Andrew R. Rickard; Scot T. Martin; Gordon McFiggans; Hugh Coe

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E. Nemitz

Natural Environment Research Council

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Hugh Coe

University of Manchester

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D. Fowler

Natural Environment Research Council

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