Abstract

Abstract. Primary ice formation, which is an important process for mixed-phase clouds with an impact on their lifetime, radiative balance, and hence the climate, strongly depends on the availability of ice-nucleating particles (INPs). Supercooled droplets within these clouds remain liquid until an INP immersed in or colliding with the droplet reaches its activation temperature. Only a few aerosol particles are acting as INPs and the freezing efficiency varies among them. Thus, the fraction of supercooled water in the cloud depends on the specific properties and concentrations of the INPs. Primary biological aerosol particles (PBAPs) have been identified as very efficient INPs at high subzero temperatures, but their very low atmospheric concentrations make it difficult to quantify their impact on clouds. Here we use the regional atmospheric model COSMO–ART to simulate the heterogeneous ice nucleation by PBAPs during a 1-week case study on a domain covering Europe. We focus on three highly ice-nucleation-active PBAP species, Pseudomonas syringae bacteria cells and spores from the fungi Cladosporium sp. and Mortierella alpina. PBAP emissions are parameterized in order to represent the entirety of bacteria and fungal spores in the atmosphere. Thus, only parts of the simulated PBAPs are assumed to act as INPs. The ice nucleation parameterizations are specific for the three selected species and are based on a deterministic approach. The PBAP concentrations simulated in this study are within the range of previously reported results from other modeling studies and atmospheric measurements. Two regimes of PBAP INP concentrations are identified: a temperature-limited and a PBAP-limited regime, which occur at temperatures above and below a maximal concentration at around −10 ∘C, respectively. In an ensemble of control and disturbed simulations, the change in the average ice crystal concentration by biological INPs is not statistically significant, suggesting that PBAPs have no significant influence on the average state of the cloud ice phase. However, if the cloud top temperature is below −15 ∘C, PBAP can influence the cloud ice phase and produce ice crystals in the absence of other INPs. Nevertheless, the number of produced ice crystals is very low and it has no influence on the modeled number of cloud droplets and hence the cloud structure.

Highlights

  • The initial formation of ice crystals in mixed-phase clouds is catalyzed by ice-nucleating particles (INPs) at certain temperatures and relative humidities, depending on the properties of the aerosol particle acting as the INP (Hoose and Möhler, 2012)

  • The horizontally distributed bacteria and fungal spore number concentrations at the lowest model layer (∼ 10 m above ground) are shown in Figs. 2 and 3 for the selected case study to illustrate the order of magnitude of aerosol concentrations that might serve as INPs

  • primary biological aerosol particles (PBAPs) have been implemented in the regional model COSMO–ART by means of individual emission and freezing parameterizations to study their role as INPs for mixedphase clouds

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Summary

Introduction

The initial formation of ice crystals in mixed-phase clouds is catalyzed by ice-nucleating particles (INPs) at certain temperatures and relative humidities, depending on the properties of the aerosol particle acting as the INP (Hoose and Möhler, 2012). Some primary biological aerosol particles (PBAPs) are found to be ice nucleation active in the immersion freezing mode, i.e., initiating freezing from the inside of a supercooled liquid cloud droplet. When comparing the freezing onset temperatures, some ice-nucleation-active bacteria and fungi are among the most active INPs present in the Earth’s. M. Hummel et al.: Influence of primary biological aerosol particles on clouds atmosphere (Després et al, 2012; Hoose and Möhler, 2012; Murray et al, 2012; Morris et al, 2013)

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