home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.environment,sci.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!swrinde!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!boulder!cnsnews!rintintin.Colorado.EDU!rparson
- From: rparson@rintintin.colorado.edu (Robert Parson)
- Subject: Ozone Depletion FAQ Part IV: UV Radiation and its Effects
- Message-ID: <Cn7E2q.67I@cnsnews.Colorado.EDU>
- Followup-To: sci.environment
- 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.
- Originator: rparson@rintintin.Colorado.EDU
- Keywords: ozone layer depletion UVB UVA skin cancer phytoplankton
- Sender: usenet@cnsnews.Colorado.EDU (Net News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: rintintin.colorado.edu
- Reply-To: rparson@rintintin.colorado.edu
- Organization: University of Colorado, Boulder
- Date: Fri, 25 Mar 1994 04:35:14 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Lines: 610
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu sci.environment:18026 sci.answers:1007 news.answers:16819
-
- Archive-name: ozone-depletion/uv
- Last-modified: 25 March
- Version: 4.2
-
-
- These files are posted monthly, usually in the third week of the month.
- They may be obtained by anonymous ftp from rtfm.mit.edu (18.70.0.209)
- in the directory:
-
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/ozone-depletion
-
- which contains the four files intro, stratcl, antarctic, and uv.
-
- They may also be obtained by sending the following message
- 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".
-
- ***********************************************************************
- * 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 *
- * 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. *
- ***********************************************************************
-
-
- 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.
-
-
- | _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. 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@rintintin.colorado.edu
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- 1. What is "UV-B"?
-
- 2. How does UV-B vary from place to place?
-
- 3. *Is* UV-B increasing?
-
- 4. What is the relationship between UV radiation and skin cancer?
-
- 5. Is ozone loss responsible for the melanoma upsurge?
-
- 6. Does UV Radiation cause cataracts?
-
- 7. Are sheep going blind in Chile?
-
- 8. What effects does increased UV have on agriculture?
-
- 9. What effects does increased UV have on marine life?
-
- 10. Is UV-B responsible for the amphibian decline?
-
- References
-
-
- 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.)
-
-
- 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).
-
-
-
- 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 convincing evidence of
- UV-B increases in Toronto, Canada over 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
- since DNA absorbs strongly there. 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. The trends are strongly influenced by the unusually large,
- and probably transient, ozone losses in these regions in the years
- 1992-1993 (see part I) and should therefore not be extrapolated into
- the future; they do provide strong evidence of a link between ozone
- loss at middle latitudes and total UV-B radiation.
-
- 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].
-
-
- 4. What is the relationship between UV radiation 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.
- [Tevini]. 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.
-
- [Madronich and deGruiji] 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.]
-
-
- 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.)
-
-
- 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]
-
-
- 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.
-
-
- 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] 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.
-
-
- 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, some work at night to repair the
- damage done during the day. These natural mechanisms however, are
- often triggered by _visible_ light intensities, in which case they
- do 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 difficult to draw general conclusions at this stage. We
- can infer 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 large depletions at high latitudes since UV intensities
- at high latitudes are always low. (One must be a little 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.
-
- To my knowledge, only one field study has been published so far.
- [Smith et al.]. These workers 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 - yet. (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.
-
- 10. Is UV-B responsible for the amphibian decline?
-
- [This is a temporary answer, included essentially as a pointer to
- the paper by Blaustein et al. I intend to include a more substantive
- paragraph in the April 1994 version of this FAQ, after I have
- had a chance to look over the literature. Please send
- information and comments to rparson@rintintin.colorado.edu]
-
- UV-B is unlikely to be the primary cause of this mysterious
- phenomenon, but it may be one of several interacting factors [Wake].
- A recent field study [Blaustein et al.] in the Oregon Cascades found
- that the eggs of two species of frogs that are known to be in serious
- decline are adversely affected by ambient levels of UV-B, while another
- species that is not in decline seems to be unaffected.
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
-
- 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.
-
-
- Introductory Reading:
-
- [Graedel and Crutzen] T. E. Graedel and P. J. Crutzen,
- _Atmospheric Change: an Earth System Perspective_, Freeman, NY
- 1993.
-
- [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.
-
- ----------------------------
- Books and Review Articles:
-
- [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.
-
- -----------------------------------
- More Specialized:
-
- [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.
-
- [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.
-
- [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.])
-
- [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.
-
- [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 Gruiji] S. Madronich and F. R. de Gruiji,
- "Skin Cancer and UV radiation", _Nature_ _366_, 23, 1993.
-
- [Pearce] F. Pearce, "Ozone hole 'innocent' of Chile's ills",
- _New Scientist_ #1887, 7, 21 Aug. 1993.
-
- [Roach] M. Roach, "Sun Struck", _Health_, May/June 1992, p. 41.
- (See especially the sidebar by Steven Finch on p. 50).
-
- [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 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.
-
- [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.
-
-
-