Xref: info.physics.utoronto.ca news.answers:30606 sci.answers:1675 sci.environment:48629
Path: spot.Colorado.EDU!rparson
From: rparson@spot.colorado.edu (Robert Parson)
Newsgroups: sci.environment,sci.answers,news.answers
Subject: Ozone Depletion FAQ Part IV: UV Radiation and its Effects
Followup-To: sci.environment
Date: 10 Oct 1994 03:19:07 GMT
Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder
Lines: 760
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Message-ID: <37abrb$gpc@CUBoulder.Colorado.EDU>
Reply-To: rparson@spot.colorado.edu
NNTP-Posting-Host: spot.colorado.edu
Summary: This is the fourth of four files dealing with stratospheric
ozone depletion. It describes the properties of solar UV
radiation and some of its biological effects.
Keywords: ozone layer depletion UVB UVA skin cancer phytoplankton
Originator: rparson@spot.Colorado.EDU
Archive-name: ozone-depletion/uv
Last-modified: 9 October 1994
Version: 4.7
-----------------------------
Subject: How to get this FAQ
These files are posted monthly, usually in the third week of the month.
The current versions are also stored on several archives:
A. World-Wide Web
A hypertext version is located at:
http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/ozone-depletion/top.html
Plaintext versions can be found at:
ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/
ftp://ftp.uu.net/usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/
----
B. Anonynmous ftp
To rtfm.mit.edu, in the directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion
To ftp.uu.net, in the directory /usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion
Look for the four files named intro, stratcl, antarctic, and uv.
----
C. Regular email
Send the following messages to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu:
send usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/intro
send usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/stratcl
send usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/antarctic
send usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion/uv
Leave the subject line blank.
If you want to find out more about the mail server, send a
message to it containing the word "help".
-----------------------------
Subject: Copyright Notice
***********************************************************************
* Copyright 1994 Robert Parson *
* *
* This file may be distributed, copied, and archived. All *
* copies must include this notice and the paragraph below entitled *
* "Caveat". Reproduction and distribution for personal profit is *
* not permitted. If this document is transmitted to other networks or *
* stored on an electronic archive, I ask that you inform me. I also *
* ask you to keep your archive up to date; in the case of world-wide *
* web pages, this is most easily done by linking to the master at the *
* ohio-state http URL instead of storing local copies. Finally, I *
* request that you inform me before including any of this information *
* in any publications of your own. Students should note that this *
* is _not_ a peer-reviewed publication and may not be acceptable as *
* a reference for school projects; it should instead be used as a *
* pointer to the published literature. In particular, all scientific *
* data, numerical estimates, etc. should be accompanied by a citation *
* to the original published source, not to this document. *
***********************************************************************
-----------------------------
Subject: General Remarks
This file deals with the physical properties of ultraviolet
radiation and its biological consequences, emphasizing the
possible effects of stratospheric ozone depletion. It frequently
refers back to Part I, where the basic properties of the ozone
layer are described; the reader should look over that file first.
The overall approach I take is conservative. I concentrate on what
is known and on most probable, rather than worst-case, scenarios.
For example, I have relatively little to say about the
effects of UV radiation on plants - this does not mean that the
effects are small, it means that they are as yet not well
quantified (and moreover, I am not well qualified to interpret the
literature.) Policy decisions must take into account not only the
most probable scenario, but also a range of less probable ones.
will probably do, but also the worst that he could possibly do.
There have been surprises, mostly unpleasant, in this field in the
past, and there are sure to be more in the future. In general,
_much_ less is known about biological effects of UV-B than about
the physics and chemistry of the ozone layer.
-----------------------------
Subject: Caveats, Disclaimers, and Contact Information
| _Caveat_: I am not a specialist. In fact, I am not an atmospheric
| scientist at all - I am a physical chemist studying gas-phase
| reactions who talks to atmospheric scientists. In this part in
| particular I am well outside the range of my own expertise.
| I have discussed some aspects of this subject with specialists,
| but I am solely responsible for everything written here, including
| any errors. On the other hand, if you find this document in an
| online archive somewhere, I am not responsible for any *other*
| information that may happen to reside in that archive. This document
| should not be cited in publications off the net; rather, it should
| be used as a pointer to the published literature.
*** Corrections and comments are welcomed.
- Robert Parson
Associate Professor
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,
University of Colorado (for which I do not speak)
rparson@spot.colorado.edu
Robert.Parson@colorado.edu
-----------------------------
Subject: TABLE OF CONTENTS
How to get this FAQ
Copyright Notice
General Remarks
Caveats, Disclaimers, and Contact Information
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.) What is "UV-B"?
2.) How does UV-B vary from place to place?
3.) Is UV-B at the earth's surface increasing?
4.) What is the relationship between UV and skin cancer?
5.) Is ozone loss to blame for the melanoma upsurge?
6.) Does UV-B cause cataracts?
7.) Are sheep going blind in Chile?
8.) What effects does increased UV have upon plant life?
9.) What effects does increased UV have on marine life?
10.) Is UV-B responsible for the amphibian decline?
REFERENCES FOR PART IV
Introductory Reading
Books and General Review Articles
More Specialized References
-----------------------------
Subject: 1.) What is "UV-B"?
"UV-B" refers to UV light having a wavelength between 280 and
320 nm. These wavelengths are on the lower edge of ozone's UV
absorption band, in the so-called "Huggins bands". They are
absorbed by ozone, but less efficiently than shorter wavelengths
("UV-C"). (The absorption cross-section of ozone increases by more
than 2 orders of magnitude between 320 nm and the peak value at
~250 nm.) Depletion of the ozone layer would first of all result
in increased UV-B. In principle UV-C would also increase, but it is
absorbed so efficiently that a very large depletion would have to
take place in order for significant amounts to reach the earth's
surface. UV-B and UV-C are absorbed by DNA and other biological
macromolecules, inducing photochemical reactions. UV radiation with
a wavelength longer than 320 nm is called "UV-A". It is not
absorbed by ozone, but it is not believed to be especially
dangerous. (See, however, question #6.)
-----------------------------
Subject: 2.) How does UV-B vary from place to place?
A great deal. It is strongest at low latitudes and high altitudes.
At higher latitudes, the sun is always low in the sky so that it takes
a longer path through the atmosphere and more of the UV-B is absorbed.
For this reason, ozone depletion is likely to have a greater impact on
_local_ ecosystems, such as terrestrial plants and the Antarctic marine
phytoplankton, than on humans or their livestock.
UV also varies with altitude and local cloud cover. These trends can
be seen in the following list of annually-averaged UV indices for
several US cities [Roach] (units are arbitrary - I don't know
precisely how this index is defined though I assume it is
proportional to some integral over the UV-b region of the spectrum)
Minneapolis, Minnesota 570
Chicago, Illinois 637
Washington, DC 683
San Francisco, California 715
Los Angeles, California 824
Denver, Colorado 951
Miami, Florida 1028
Honolulu, Hawaii 1147
It should be noted that skin cancer rates show a similar trend.
(See below).
-----------------------------
Subject: 3.) Is UV-B at the earth's surface increasing?
Yes, in some places; no, in others.
Very large increases - up to a factor of 2 - have been seen even
in the outer portions of the Antarctic hole. [Frederick and
Alberts]
Small increases, of order 1% per year, have been measured in the
Swiss Alps. [Blumthaler and Ambach] These _net_ increases are small
compared to natural day-to-day fluctuations, but they are actually
a little larger than would be expected from the amount of ozone
depletion over the same period.
In urban areas of the US, UV-B
levels showed no significant increase (and in most cases actually
decreased a little) between 1974 and 1985. [Scotto et al.]. This
is probably due to increasing urban pollution, including low-level
ozone and aerosols. [Grant] Tropospheric ozone is actually
somewhat more effective at absorbing UV than stratospheric ozone,
because UV light is scattered much more in the troposphere, and
hence takes a longer path. [Bruehl and Crutzen] Increasing
amounts of tropospheric aerosols, from urban and industrial
pollution, may also offset UV-B increases at the ground. [Liu et
al.] [Madronich 1992, 1993] [Grant] There have been questions about
the suitability of the instruments used by Scotto et al.; they were
not designed for measuring long-term trends, and they put too much
weight on regions of the UV spectrum which are not appreciably
absorbed by ozone in any case. [WMO 1989] Nevertheless it seems
clear that so far ozone depletion over US cities is small enough to
be largely offset by competing factors. Tropospheric ozone and aerosols
have increased in rural areas of the US and Europe as well, so
these areas may also be screened from the effects of ozone depletion.
A recent study [Kerr and McElroy] has found evidence of
UV-B increases in Toronto, Canada during the period 1989-1993. The UV
intensity at 300 nm increased by 35% per year in winter and 7% per
year in summer. At this wavelength 99% of the total UV is absorbed,
so these represent large increases in a small number, and do not
represent a health hazard; nevertheless these wavelengths play a
disproportionately large role in skin carcinoma and plant damage.
Total UV-B irradiance, weighted in such a way as to correlate with
incidence of sunburn ("erythemally active radiation"), increased by
5% per year in winter and 2% per year in summer. These are not
really "trends", as they are dominated by the unusually large, but
temporary, ozone losses in these regions in the years 1992-1993
(see part I), and they should not be extrapolated into the future.
In fact, [Michaels et al.] have claimed that the winter
"trend" arises entirely from a four-day period at the end of March 1993
(they do not discuss the summer trend.) Kerr and McElroy respond
that these days are also reponsible for the strong decrease in average
ozone over the same period, so that their results do demonstrate the
expected link between total ozone and total UV-B radiation. Indeed,
UV-B increases of similar magnitude between 1992 and 1993 have been
seen in Germany, where large ozone losses were also observed during this
period. [Seckmeyer et al.]
Indirect evidence for increases has been obtained in the Southern
Hemisphere, where stratospheric ozone depletion is larger and
tropospheric ozone (and aerosol pollution) is lower. Biologically
weighted UV-B irradiances at a station in New Zealand were 1.4-1.8
times higher than irradiances at a comparable latitude and season in
Germany, of which a factor of 1.3-1.6 can be attributed to differences
in the ozone column over the two locations [Seckmeyer and McKenzie].
In the southern hemisphere summer, the noontime UV-B irradiance
at Ushaia in Tierra del Fuego is 45% above what would be predicted
were there no ozone depletion. [Frederick et al. 1993]
In comparing UV-B estimates, one must pay careful attention to
exactly what is being reported. One wants to know not just whether
there is an increase, but how much increase there is at any given
wavelength, since the shorter wavelengths are more dangerous.
Different measuring instruments have different spectral responses,
and are more or less sensitive to various spectral regions. [Wayne,
Rowland 1991]. Wavelength-resolving instruments, such as the
spectroradiometers being used in Antarctica, Argentina, and Toronto,
are the most informative, as they allow one to distinguish the
effects of ozone trends from those due to clouds and aerosols.
[Madronich 1993] [Kerr and McElroy].
-----------------------------
Subject: 4.) What is the relationship between UV and skin cancer?
There are three kinds of skin cancer, basal cell carcinomas,
squamous cell carcinomas, and melanomas. In the US there were
500,000 cases of the first, 100,000 of the second, and 27,600 of
the third in 1990. [Wayne] More than 90% of the skin carcinomas in
the US are attributed to UV-B exposure: their frequency varies
sharply with latitude, just as UV does. The mechanism by which UV-B
induces carcinomas has been identified - the pyrimidine bases
in the DNA molecule form dimers when stimulated by UV-B radiation.
[Taylor] [Tevini] [Young et al.]. Fortunately, these cancers are
relatively easy to treat if detected in time, and are rarely fatal.
Skin carcinoma rates vary sharply with latitude, just as UV-B does.
Fair-skinned people of North European ancestry are particularly
susceptible; the highest rates in the world are found in Queensland,
a northerly province of Australia, where a population of largely
English and Irish extraction is exposed to very high natural UV
radiation levels.
[Madronich and deGruijl] have estimated the expected increases in
skin carcinoma rates due to ozone depletion over the period 1979-1992:
Lat. % ozone loss % increase in rate, % increase in rate,
1979-1992 basal cell carcinoma squamous cell carcinoma
55N 7.4 +-1.3 13.5 +-5.3 25.4 +-10.3
35N 4.8 +-1.4 8.6 +-4.0 16.0 +-7.6
15N 1.5 +-1.1 2.7 +-2.4 4.8 +-4.4
15S 1.9 +-1.3 3.6 +-2.6 6.5 +-4.8
35S 4.0 +-1.6 8.1 +-3.6 14.9 +-6.8
55S 9.0 +-1.5 20.4 +-7.4 39.3 +-15.1
Of course, the rates themselves are much smaller at high latitudes,
where the relative increases in rates are large. These estimates do
not take changes in lifestyle into consideration.
Malignant melanoma is much more dangerous, but its connection
with UV exposure is not well understood. There seems to a correlation
between melanomas and brief, intense exposures to UV (long before
the cancer appears.) Melanoma incidence is definitely correlated with
latitude, with twice as many deaths (relative to state population)
in Florida or Texas as in Wisconsin or Montana, but this correlation
need not imply a causal relationship. Some claim that UV-A, which is
not absorbed by ozone, is involved. [Skolnick] [Setlow et al.]
-----------------------------
Subject: 5.) Is ozone loss to blame for the melanoma upsurge?
A few physicians have said so, but most others think not.
[Skolnick]
First of all, UV-B has not, so far, increased very much, at least
in the US and Europe.
Second, melanoma takes 10-20 years to develop. There hasn't been
enough time for ozone depletion to play a significant role.
Third, the melanoma epidemic has been going on since the 1940's.
Recent increases in rates may just reflect better reporting, or
the popularity of suntans in the '60's and '70's. (This becomes
more likely if UV-A is in fact involved.)
-----------------------------
Subject: 6.) Does UV-B cause cataracts?
While the evidence for this is indirect, it is very plausible.
The lens of the eye is a good UV-filter, protecting the delicate
structures in the retina. Too much UV results in short-term "snow
blindness", but the effects of prolonged, repeated exposure are
not known. People living in naturally high UV environments such
as Bolivia or Tibet do have a high incidence of cataracts, and overall
cataracts are more frequently seen at lower latitudes. [Tevini]
[Zigman]
-----------------------------
Subject: 7.) Are sheep going blind in Chile?
If they are, it's not because of ozone depletion.
For a short period each year, the edge of the ozone hole passes
over Tierra del Fuego, at the southern end of the South American
continent. This has led to a flurry of reports of medical damage
to humans and livestock. Dermatologists claim that they are seeing
more patients with sun-related conditions, nursery owners report
damage to plants, a sailor says that his yacht's dacron sails have
become brittle, and a rancher declares that 50 of his sheep,
grazing at high altitudes, suffer "temporary cataracts" in the
spring. (_Newsweek_, 9 December 1991, p. 43; NY Times, 27 July
1991, p. C4; 27 March 1992, p. A7).
These claims are hard to believe. At such a high latitude,
springtime UV-B is naturally very low and the temporary increase
due to ozone depletion still results in a UV fluence that is well
below that found at lower latitudes. Moreover, the climate of
Patagonia is notoriously cold and wet. (There is actually more of
a problem in the summer, after the hole breaks up and ozone-poor
air drifts north. The ozone depletion is smaller, but the
background UV intensity is much higher.) There may well be effects
on _local_ species, adapted to low UV levels, but even these are
not expected to appear so soon. It was only in 1987 that the hole
grew large enough to give rise to significant UV increases
in southern Chile, and cataracts and malignant melanomas take many
years to develop. To be sure, people do get sunburns and
skin cancer even in Alaska and northern Europe, and all
else being equal one expects on purely statistical grounds such
cases to increase, from a small number to a slightly larger number.
All else is definitely not equal, however - the residents are now
intensely aware of the hazards of UV radiation and are likely to
protect themselves better. I suspect that the increase in
sun-related skin problems noted by the dermatologists comes about
because more people are taking such cases to their doctors.
As for the blind sheep, a group at Johns Hopkins has investigated
this and ascribes it to a local infection ("pink eye"). [Pearce]
This is _not_ meant to dismiss UV-B increases in Patagonia as
insignificant. Damage to local plants, for example, may well emerge
in the long term, as the ozone hole is expected to last for 50
years or more. The biological consequences of UV radiation are real,
but often very subtle; I personally find it hard to believe that
such effects are showing up so soon, and in such a dramatic fashion.
Ozone depletion is a real problem, but this particular story is a red
herring.
-----------------------------
Subject: 8.) What effects does increased UV have upon plant life?
Generally harmful, but hard to quantify. Many experiments have
studied the response of plants to UV-B radiation, either by
irradiating the plants directly or by filtering out some of the UV
in a low-latitude environment where it is naturally high. The
artificial UV sources do not have the same spectrum as solar
radiation, however, while the filtering experiments do not
necessarily isolate all of the variables, even when climate
and humidity are controlled by growing the plants in a greenhouse.
Out of some 200 agricultural plants tested, more than half show
sensitivity to UV-B increases. The measured effects vary markedly
from one species to another; some adapt very readily while others are
seriously damaged. Even within species there are marked differences;
for example, one soybean variety showed a 25% growth reduction under a
simulated ozone depletion of 16%, whereas another variety showed no
significant yield reduction. The general sense seems to be that
ozone depletion amounting to 10% or more could seriously affect
agriculture. Smaller depletions could have a severe impact on local
ecosystems, but very little is known about this at present.
I have not investigated the literature on this in detail, not
being a biologist. Interested readers should consult [Tevini and
Teramura], [Bornman and Teramura], or the book by [Tevini] and
the references therein. If any botanist out there would like to write
a summary for this FAQ, please let me know.
-----------------------------
Subject: 9.) What effects does increased UV have on marine life?
Again, generally harmful but hard to quantify. Seawater is
surprisingly transparent to UV-B. In clear waters radiation at 315
nm is attenuated by only 14% per meter depth. [Jerlov]. Many marine
creatures live in surface waters, and they have evolved a variety
of methods to cope with UV: some simply swim to lower depths, some
develop protective coatings, while some work at night to repair the
damage done during the day. Often these natural mechanisms are
triggered by _visible_ light intensities, in which case they
might not protect against an increase in the _ratio_ of UV to visible
light. Also, if a photosynthesizing organism protects itself by
staying at lower depths, it will get less visible light and produce
less oxygen. An increase in UV-B can thus affect an ecosystem
without necessarily killing off individual organisms.
Many experiments have been carried out to determine the
response of various marine creatures to UV radiation; as with land
plants the effects vary a great deal from one species to another,
and it is not possible to draw general conclusions at this stage.
[Holm-Hansen et al.] We can assume that organisms that live in tropical
waters are safe, since there is little or no ozone depletion there, and
that organisms that are capable of living in the tropics are probably
safe from ozone depletion at high latitudes since background UV
intensitiesat high latitudes are always low. (One must be careful
with the second inference if the organism's natural defenses are
stimulated by visible light.) The problems arise with organisms
that have adapted to the naturally low UV levels of polar regions.
In this case, we have a natural laboratory for studying UV
effects: the Antarctic Ozone hole. (Part III of the FAQ discusses
the hole in detail.) The outer parts of the hole extend far out
into the ocean, beyond the pack ice, and these waters get
springtime UV-B doses equal to or greater than what is
seen in a normal antarctic summer. [Frederick and Alberts] [Smith
et al.]. The UV in shallow surface waters is effectively even
higher, because the sea ice is more transparent in spring than in
summer. There has been speculation that this UV could cause a
population collapse in the marine phytoplankton, the microscopic
plants that comprise the base of the food chain. Even if the plankton
are not killed, their photosynthetic production could be reduced.
Laboratory experiments show that UV-A and UV-B do indeed inhibit
phytoplankton photosynthesis. [Cullen and Neale] [Cullen et al.]
In one field study, [Smith et al.]. measured the photosynthetic
productivity of the phytoplankton in the "marginal ice zone" (MIZ),
the layer of relatively fresh meltwater that lies over saltier
deep water. Since the outer boundary of the ozone hole is
relatively sharp and fluctuates from day to day, they were able to
compare photosynthesis inside and outside the hole, and to
correlate photosynthetic yield with shipboard UV measurements.
They concluded that the UV-B increase brought about an overall
decrease of 6-12% in phytoplankton productivity. Since the "hole"
lasts for about 10-12 weeks, this corresponds to an overall decrease
of 2-4% for the year. The natural variability in phytoplankton
productivity from year to year is estimated to be about + or - 25%,
so the _immediate_ effects of the ozone hole, while real, are far
from catastrophic. To quote from [Smith et al.]: "Our estimated
loss of 7 x 10^12 g of carbon per year is about three orders
of magnitude smaller than estimates of _global_ phytoplankton
production and thus is not likely to be significant in this
context. On the other hand, we find that the O3-induced loss to a
natural community of phytoplankton in the MIZ is measurable and the
subsequent ecological consequences of the magnitude and timing of
this early spring loss remain to be determined." It appears, then,
that overall loss in productivity is not large.
The cumulative effects on the marine community are not known. The
ozone hole first became large enough to expose marine life to large
UV increases in 1987, and [Smith et al.] carried out their survey in
1990. Ecological consequences - the displacement of UV-sensitive
species by UV-tolerant ones - are likely to be more important than
a decline in overall productivity, although they are poorly
understood at present. [McMinn et al.] have examined the relative
abundance of four common phytoplankton species in sediment cores from
the fjords of the Vestfold hills on the Antarctic coast. They conclude
that compositional changes over the past 20 years (which should include
effects due to the ozone hole) cannot be distinguished from long-term
natural fluctuations. Apparently thick coastal ice protects the
phytoplankton in these regions from the effects of increased UVB;
moreover, these phytoplankton bloom after the seasonal hole has closed.
McMinn et al. emphasize that these conditions do not apply to ice-edge
and sea-ice communities.
For a general review, see [Holm-Hansen et al.]
-----------------------------
Subject: 10.) Is UV-B responsible for the amphibian decline?
UV-B may be part of the story, although it is unlikely to be the
principal cause of this mysterious event.
During the past decade, there has been a widespread decline in
amphibian populations [Livermore] [Wake]. The decline appears to be
global in scope, although some regions and many species appear to be
unaffected. While habitat destruction is undoubtedly an important
factor, many of the affected species are native to regions where
habitat is relatively undisturbed. This has led to speculation that
global perturbations, such as pesticide pollution, acid deposition,
and climate change, could be involved.
Recently, [Blaustein et al.] have investigated the effects of UV-B
radiation on the reproduction of amphibians living in the Cascade
Mountains of Oregon. In their first experiment, the eggs of several
amphibian species were analyzed for an enzyme that is known to
*repair* UV-induced DNA damage. The eggs of the Cascades frog,
R. cascadae, and of the Western toad, Bufo Boreas, showed low levels
of this enzyme; both species are known to be in serious decline
(R. Cascadae populations have fallen by ~80% since the 1970's [Wake].)
In contrast, much higher levels of the enzyme are found in the eggs of
the Pacific Tree Frog, _Hyla Regilla_, whose populations do not appear
to be in decline.
Blaustein et al. then studied the effects of UV-B upon the
reproductive success of these species in the field, by screening the
eggs with a filter that blocks the ambient UV. Two control groups were
used for comparison; in one no filter was present and in the other a
filter that *transmitted* UV-B was put in place. They found that for
the two species that are known to be in decline, and that showed low
levels of the repair enzyme, filtering the UV dramatically increased
the proportion of eggs surviving until hatch, whereas for the species
that is not in decline and that produces high levels of the enzyme,
filtering the UV made little difference. Thus, both the laboratory and
the field experiments suggest a correlation between amphibian declines
and UV sensitivity, albeit a correlation that at present is based on a
very small number of species and a limited time period.
Contrary to the impression given by some media reports, Blaustein and
coworkers did *not* claim that ozone depletion is "the cause" of the
amphibian decline. The decline appears to be world-wide, whereas ozone
depletion is restricted to middle and high latitudes. Also, many
amphibian species lay their eggs under dense canopies or underground
where there is little solar radiation. So, UV should be regarded
as one of many stresses that may be acting on amphibian populations.
-----------------------------
Subject: REFERENCES FOR PART IV
A remark on references: they are neither representative nor
comprehensive. There are _hundreds_ of people working on these
problems. For the most part I have limited myself to papers that
are (1) widely available (if possible, _Science_ or _Nature_ rather
than archival journals such as _J. Geophys. Res._) and (2) directly
related to the "frequently asked questions". Readers who want to
see "who did what" should consult the review articles listed below.
or, if they can get them, the WMO reports which are extensively
documented.
-----------------------------
Subject: Introductory Reading
[Graedel and Crutzen] T. E. Graedel and P. J. Crutzen,
_Atmospheric Change: an Earth System Perspective_, Freeman, NY
1993.
[Roach] M. Roach, "Sun Struck", _Health_, May/June 1992, p. 41.
[Rowland 1989] F. S. Rowland, "Chlorofluorocarbons and the
depletion of stratospheric ozone", _American Scientist_ _77_, 36,
1989.
[Zurer] P. S. Zurer, "Ozone Depletion's Recurring Surprises
Challenge Atmospheric Scientists", _Chemical and Engineering News_,
24 May 1993, pp. 9-18.
-----------------------------
Subject: Books and General Review Articles
[Chamberlain and Hunten] J. W. Chamberlain and D. M. Hunten,
_Theory of Planetary Atmospheres_, 2nd Edition, Academic Press, 1987
[Dobson] G.M.B. Dobson, _Exploring the Atmosphere_, 2nd Edition,
Oxford, 1968.
[Rowland 1991] F. S. Rowland, "Stratospheric Ozone Depletion",
_Ann. Rev. Phys. Chem._ _42_, 731, 1991.
[Tevini] M. Tevini, editor: "UV-B Radiation and Ozone Depletion:
Effects on humans, animals, plants, microorganisms, and materials"
Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, 1993.
[Wayne] R. P. Wayne, _Chemistry of Atmospheres_, 2nd. Ed.,
Oxford, 1991.
[WMO 1988] World Meteorological Organization,
_Report of the International Ozone Trends Panel_,
Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project - Report #18.
[WMO 1989] World Meteorological Organization,
_Scientific Assessment of Stratospheric Ozone: 1989_
Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project - Report #20.
[WMO 1991] World Meteorological Organization,
_Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 1991_
Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project - Report #25.
[WMO 1994] World Meteorological Organization,
_Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 1994_
Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project - Report #25.
(Executive Summary; the full report is to be published in November 1994).
[Young et al.] _Environmental UV Photobiology_, Ed. by A. R. Young,
L. O. Bjorn, J. Mohan, and W. Nultsch, Plenum, N.Y. 1993.
-----------------------------
Subject: More Specialized References
[Blaustein et al.] A. R. Blaustein, P. D. Hoffman, D. G. Hokit,
J. M. Kiesecker, S. C. Walls, and J. B. Hays, "UV repair and
resistance to solar UV-B in amphibian eggs: A link to population
declines?", _Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci._ _91_, 1791, 1994.
[Blumthaler and Ambach] M. Blumthaler and W. Ambach, "Indication of
increasing solar ultraviolet-B radiation flux in alpine regions",
_Science_ _248_, 206, 1990.
[Bornman and Teramura] J. F. Bornman and A. H. Teramura, "Effects of
Ultraviolet-B Radiation on Terrestrial Plants", in [Young et al.]
[Bruehl and Crutzen] C. Bruehl and P. Crutzen, "On the
disproportionate role of tropospheric ozone as a filter against
solar UV-B radiation",_Geophys. Res. Lett._ _16_, 703, 1989.
[Cullen et al.] J. J. Cullen, P. J. Neale, and M. P. Lesser, "Biological
weighting function for the inhibition of phytoplankton photosynthesis by
ultraviolet radiation", _Science_ _258_, 646, 1992.
[Cullen and Neale] J. J. Cullen and P. J. Neale, "Ultraviolet Radiation,
ozone depletion, and marine photosynthesis", _Photosynthesis Research_
_39_, 303, 1994.
[Frederick and Alberts] J.E. Frederick and A. Alberts, "Prolonged
enhancement in surface ultraviolet radiation during the Antarctic
spring of 1990", _Geophys. Res. Lett._ _18_, 1869, 1991.
[Frederick et al. 1993] J.E. Frederick, P.F. Soulen, S.B. Diaz,
I. Smolskaia, C.R. Booth, T. Lucas, and D. Neuschuler,
"Solar Ultraviolet Irradiance Observed from Southern Argentina:
September 1990 to March 1991", J. Geophys. Res. _98_, 8891, 1993.
[Grant] W. Grant, "Global stratospheric ozone and UV-B radiation",
_Science_ _242_, 1111, 1988. (a comment on [Scotto et al.])
[Holm-Hansen et al.] O. Holm-Hansen, D. Lubin, and E. W. Helbling,
"Ultraviolet Radiation and its Effects on Organisms in Aquatic
Environments", in [Young et al.]
[Jerlov] N.G. Jerlov, "Ultraviolet Radiation in the Sea",
_Nature_ _166_, 112, 1950.
[Kerr and McElroy] J. B. Kerr and C. T. McElroy, "Evidence for Large
Upward Trends of Ultraviolet-B Radiation Linked to Ozone Depletion",
_Science_ _262_, 1032, 1993.
[Livermore] B. Livermore, "Amphibian alarm: Just where have all the
frogs gone?", _Smithsonian_, October 1992.
[Liu et al.] S.C. Liu, S.A. McKeen, and S. Madronich, "Effect of
anthropogenic aerosols on biologically active ultraviolet
radiation", _Geophys. Res. Lett._ _18_, 2265, 1991.
[Madronich 1992] S. Madronich, "Implications of recent total
atmospheric ozone measurements for biologically active ultraviolet
radiation reaching the earth's surface",
_Geophys. Res. Lett. _19_, 37, 1992.
[Madronich 1993] S. Madronich, in [Tevini], above.
[Madronich and de Gruijl] S. Madronich and F. R. de Gruijl,
"Skin Cancer and UV radiation", _Nature_ _366_, 23, 1993.
[McMinn et al.] A. McMinn, H. Heijnis, and D. Hodgson, "Minimal effects
of UVB radiation on Antarctic diatoms over the past 20 years", _Nature_
_370_, 547, 1994.
[Michaels et al.] P. J. Michaels, S. F. Singer, and P. C.
Knappenberger, "Analyzing Ultraviolet-B Radiation: Is There
a Trend?", _Science_ _264_, 1341, 1994.
[Pearce] F. Pearce, "Ozone hole 'innocent' of Chile's ills",
_New Scientist_ #1887, 7, 21 Aug. 1993.
[Scotto et al.] J. Scotto, G. Cotton, F. Urbach, D. Berger, and T.
Fears, "Biologically effective ultraviolet radiation: surface
measurements in the U.S.", _Science_ _239_, 762, 1988.
[Seckmeyer et al.] G. Seckmeyer, B. Mayer, R. Erb, and G. Bernhard,
"UV-B in Germany higher in 1993 than in 1992", _Geophys. Res. Lett._
_21_, 577-580, 1994.
[Seckmeyer and McKenzie] G. Seckmeyer and R. L. McKenzie,
"Increased ultraviolet radiation in New Zealand (45 degrees S)
relative to Germany (48 degrees N.)", _Nature_ _359_, 135, 1992.
[Setlow et al.] R. B. Setlow, E. Grist, K. Thompson and
A. D. Woodhead, "Wavelengths effective in induction of Malignant
Melanoma", PNAS _90_, 6666, 1993.
[Skolnick] A. Skolnick, "Is ozone loss to blame for melanoma
upsurge?" JAMA, _265_, 3218, June 26 1991.
[Smith et al.] R. Smith, B. Prezelin, K. Baker, R. Bidigare, N.
Boucher, T. Coley, D. Karentz, S. MacIntyre, H. Matlick, D.
Menzies, M. Ondrusek, Z. Wan, and K. Waters, "Ozone depletion:
Ultraviolet radiation and phytoplankton biology in antarctic
waters", _Science_ _255_, 952, 1992.
[Taylor] J.-S. Taylor, "Unraveling the Molecular Pathway from Sunlight
to Skin Cancer", _Acc. Chem. Res._ _27_, 76-82, 1994.
[Tevini and Teramura] M. Tevini and A. H. Teramura, "UV-B effects
on terrestrial plants", _Photochemistry and Photobiology_, _50_,
479, 1989. (This issue contains a number of other papers dealing
with biological effects of UV-B radiation.)
[Wake] D. B. Wake, "Declining Amphibian Populations", _Science_
_253_, 860, 1991.
[Zigman] S. Zigman, "Ocular Damage by Environmental Radiant Energy
Return to The Skeptic Tank's main Index page.
The views and opinions stated within this web page are those of the
author or authors which wrote them and may not reflect the views and
opinions of the ISP or account user which hosts the web page. The
opinions may or may not be those of the Chairman of The Skeptic Tank.