Masters Degrees (Environmental Biology)
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Browsing Masters Degrees (Environmental Biology) by Subject "Environmental monitoring--KwaZulu-Natal."
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Item Monitoring ground-level ozone and nitrogen dioxide in parts of KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga (South Africa) by means of chemical and biological techniques.(1998) Blair, Sharon Ann.; Cooke, John Anthony.Surface ozone (O3) is one of the most toxic and abundant air pollutants. It has deleterious effects on human and animal respiration processes, and adversely affects plants. Four sites were selected for monitoring ambient O3 in the Durban metropolitan area: Botanic Gardens, University of Natal (UND), top of Kloof Gorge, and Mooi River. At each site tobacco Bel-W3 bioindicators, and NO2 and O3 passive diffusion tubes were placed. An O3 analyser (Dasibi 1108) was situated at the UND site. Monitoring was carried out for four weeks during summer, autumn and winter at each site, and during spring at the UND site. Two weeks of data from the diffusion tubes were collected during spring, from the Nelspruit area, Mpumalanga. Ozone concentrations measured with the Dasibi at the UND site were low in comparison to other urban-industrial areas in the world, with hourly values falling between 5ppb and 10 ppb. The highest hourly mean maximum recorded was 40ppb. A general spring/winter maximum and summer minimum was observed. This is typical of subtropical locations, where subsidence in prevailing anticyclonic circulation occurs. Diurnal characteristics included early morning minima and maxima at 12h00 in spring and summer, and maxima approximately two hours later in autumn and winter. This pattern was typical of that found in polluted environments, the magnitude, however, being lower. An unusual secondary nocturnal peak occurred during autumn, winter and spring. This could have been due to the long-range transport of relatively O3-rich air from a non-urban, high altitude inland area. Ozone concentrations were not strongly influenced by meteorological variables. Diffusion tube data indicated low O3, however, the coefficients of variation were high, implying a lack of precision in this technique. This technique would have to be improved before data obtained could be regarded as valid. Nitrogen dioxide, NO2, one of the precursors to O3, was monitored using diffusion tubes at the same sites. Concentrations were highest closer to the city centre, the highest concentration being 31ppb in autumn. In the Mpumalanga study, NO2 concentrations were higher in the city of Nelspruit than the surrounding areas. No significant differences were found in the O3 concentrations between the Mpumalanga sites. The tobacco plants showed the highest visible leaf injury in winter, corresponding with the higher Dasibi values, but there were no significant differences between the sites, and no significant differences in chlorophyll contents between the sites. In this study, O3-induced injury occurred below the previously established threshold of 40ppb.