Abstract

In recent decades, anthropogenic emissions in the Gulf of Mexico have caused a deterioration in air quality in surrounding areas, mainly due to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide. Over this period, interest in reactive nitrogen compounds has increased due to their relationships to air quality and ecosystem impacts associated with atmospheric deposition. In this study we summarize air concentrations of nitrogen dioxide in ambient air and wet atmospheric deposition of nitrate and ammonium along the southern coast of the United States of America and eastern Mexico over the period 2017 to 2020. The highest concentrations of ammonium and nitrate were observed in precipitation at Texas and sites in Mexico, although the highest rates of atmospheric deposition were observed in Florida and Louisiana. The ratio between ammonium and nitrate in precipitation was higher at Mexican stations than in studied sites in the United States, influenced by meteorological factors, atmospheric emissions, and characteristic air mass transport in the region. Back trajectory modeling showed the importance of the seasonality of the wind in the transport of nitrogen compounds of local and regional origin that affect Veracruz.

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