Abstract

Abstract. Ozone (O3) trends and variability from a 28-year (1987–2014) ozonesonde record at Lauder, New Zealand, have been analysed and interpreted using a statistical model and a global chemistry–climate model (CCM). Lauder is a clean rural measurement site often representative of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) mid-latitude background atmosphere. O3 trends over this period at this location are characterised by a significant positive trend below 6 km, a significant negative trend in the tropopause region and the lower stratosphere between 9 and 15 km, and no significant trend in the free troposphere (6–9 km) and the stratosphere above 15 km. We find that significant positive trends in lower tropospheric ozone are correlated with increasing temperature and decreasing relative humidity at the surface over this period, whereas significant negative trends in the upper troposphere and the lower stratosphere appear to be strongly linked to an upward trend of the tropopause height. Relative humidity and the tropopause height also dominate O3 variability at Lauder in the lower troposphere and the tropopause region, respectively. We perform an attribution of these trends to anthropogenic forcings including O3 precursors, greenhouse gases (GHGs), and O3-depleting substances (ODSs), using CCM simulations. Results indicate that changes in anthropogenic O3 precursors contribute significantly to stratospheric O3 reduction, changes in ODSs contribute significantly to tropospheric O3 reduction, and increased GHGs contribute significantly to stratospheric O3 increases at Lauder. Methane (CH4) likely contributes positively to O3 trends in both the troposphere and the stratosphere, but the contribution is not significant at the 95 % confidence level over this period. An extended analysis of CCM results covering 1960–2010 (i.e. starting well before the observations) reveals significant contributions from all forcings to O3 trends at Lauder – i.e. increases in GHGs and the increase in CH4 alone all contribute significantly to O3 increases, net increases in ODSs lead to O3 reduction, and increases in non-methane O3 precursors cause O3 increases in the troposphere and reductions in the stratosphere. This study suggests that a long-term ozonesonde record obtained at a SH mid-latitude background site (corroborated by a surface O3 record at a nearby SH mid-latitude site, Baring Head, which also shows a significant positive trend) is a useful indicator for detecting atmospheric composition and climate change associated with human activities.

Highlights

  • Ozone (O3) is an important trace gas in the Earth’s atmosphere, playing a central role in atmospheric chemistry and the radiation budget

  • We perform and analyse a suite of sensitivity simulations with different model configurations aimed at investigating the factors that potentially contribute to observed O3 trends at Lauder, e.g. CH4 and other O3 precursors, greenhouse gases (GHGs), and ozone-depleting substances (ODSs) over the period of the time series (1987–2014)

  • In the tropopause region (9–12 km), the impact on O3 trends from fixed emissions is minimal, which may suggest that changes in O3 at the tropopause are mainly controlled by the movement of the tropopause rather than changes in O3 precursors in the troposphere, and our calculation shows that there is no significant difference in modelled tropopause heights between SEN-C1-fEMIS and REFC1 simulations

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Summary

Introduction

Ozone (O3) is an important trace gas in the Earth’s atmosphere, playing a central role in atmospheric chemistry and the radiation budget. Oltmans et al (2013) analyse tropospheric O3 trends from a large suite of surface O3 and ozonesonde measurements for the past 20– 40 years and find that there is no significant overall change in tropospheric O3 in the NH and tropics; they attribute this lack of growth to controls on O3 precursor emissions after earlier increases in tropospheric O3. We focus on analysing and interpreting the tropospheric and lower stratospheric O3 changes using a simple statistical model and global chemistry–climate model (CCM) simulations, and identify the underlying dynamical and chemical changes that could contribute to the observed O3 trends at this location, which represent the evolution of background O3 in the SH mid-latitudes in general.

Ozone record
Statistical method
Chemistry–climate model simulations
Ozone variability
Ozone trends
Baring Head surface O3
Modelled ozone trends at Lauder
Modelled attribution to long-term O3 changes at Lauder
REF-C2 4 SEN-C2-fCH4
Findings
Conclusions
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