MfE Data Service :: tag:data.mfe.govt.nz,2008-10:feed:data:mapstream=84379:category=401188:sort=rMinistry for the Environmenthttps://data.mfe.govt.nz//Natural sources of particulate matter, 2000–16tag:data.mfe.govt.nz,2018-10:layers:984252018-10-16T21:41:36.319720+00:002018-10-16T21:40:58.542502+00:00
<a class="kxThumbnail" href="https://data.mfe.govt.nz/table/98425-natural-sources-of-particulate-matter-200016/" title="Details for Natural sources of particulate matter, 2000–16"><img src="https://assets.koordinates.com/kx-dandelion-live2-public/thumbs/layers/98425/307521/small.png" alt="Natural sources of particulate matter, 2000–16 thumbnail"/></a><br />
<br /><strong>Updated with new data on 16 Oct 2018</strong><br />
<p>Particulate matter (PM) is made up of solid and liquid particles in the air. It is grouped according to its size – PM10 is less than 10 micrometres (µm) in diameter; PM2.5 is less than 2.5 µm in diameter. Health effects from exposure to PM include lung and cardiac disease, and premature death.<br>
Natural sources of PM include sea salt, dust (airborne soil, also called crustal material), secondary sulphate, pollen, black carbon from wild fires, and volcanic ash. There is little evidence that sea salt particles themselves are harmful (World Health Organization (WHO), 2013) although whether sea salt that has interacted with urban air pollutants is harmful is not known. PM can also be produced by human activities, such as dust from construction or unsealed roads, but this is not considered natural because it comes from human activity.<br>
Natural sources of PM are important because although they cannot be managed they still contribute to ambient concentrations, which are subject to the National Environmental Standards for Air Quality (NESAQ). Exceedances of the NESAQ occur when the 24-hour average PM10 concentration exceeds 50 micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m3). There is no NESAQ for PM2.5 exposure, so we report on exceedances of the WHO 24-hour average PM2.5 concentration guideline (25 µg/m3).<br>
We report on data from nine sites from 2005–16 and report only on sea salt for natural PM because other sources of natural PM, such as dust and sulphate, can be generated by humans as well. We were not able to separate the natural from human-generated contributions. Analysis of particle size, composition, and sources in New Zealand shows that sea salt made the largest contribution to natural PM.<br>
More information on this dataset and how it relates to our environmental reporting indicators and topics can be found in the attached data quality pdf.</p>
From: <a href="https://data.mfe.govt.nz/group/environmental-reporting/" title="Profile for Environmental Reporting">Environmental Reporting</a><br />
Added: 16 Oct 2018<br />
Updated: 16 Oct 2018<br />