Dataset Overview
Measured ambient concentrations of ozone pollution to determine compliance with the National Ambient Air Quality Standard. Sample duration is 1-hour.
- Purpose
Ground-level ozone is formed through a chemical reaction between air-born organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) when exposed to sunlight1. High levels of ozone exposure can cause leaf damage, which can reduce the efficiency of processes such as photosynthesis. Foliar damage due to ozone exposure is the first visible sign of injury, and indicates impaired physiological processes in the leaves1. For some trees, ozone exposure can increase the likelihood of secondary stressors, like damage caused by diseases, insects, or weather events. Ozone is expressed as the average concentration (in parts per million) between the hours of 8:00 am and 8:00 pm2 from April 1 to September 30. Due to regulations, ground-level ozone pollution has improved gradually over the past decade.
- Data Collection Status
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Data collection for this dataset is ongoing
- Start date
1990-04-01
- Contents
279932 records with 7 fields
- Data Availability
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This dataset is downloadable from the FEMC, and available to download from another site.
- Data License
Linked - Third party determines data license
- Preferred Citation
Not provided
- Update Frequency
Unknown
- Maintenance Plan
Not provided
- Links
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No links available for this dataset
- Related Datasets
- Determining Dataset Similarity
- Previous Versions
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- Version 3 - Update 2021 (created 2023-11-27 by Matthias Sirch)
- Version 2 - 2020 Update (created 2021-08-31 by Matthias Sirch)
- Version 1 - VT Ozone 20201019 (created 2020-10-19 by Emma Tait)