Publication Abstracts
Plaas et al. 2025
, C. Karl, R. Cogbill, N. Rosales-Garcia, A.H. Stoop, L.L. Satterwhite, M.E. Mathieu-Campbell, J. Richmond-Bryant, H.W. Paerl, and D.S. Hamilton, 2025: CyanoHABs and CAPs: Assessing community-based monitoring of PM2.5 with regional sources of pollution in rural, northeastern North Carolina. Environ. Sci. Atmos., early on-line, doi:10.1039/D5EA00020C.
Underserved rural communities in northeastern North Carolina (NC), surrounding the Albemarle Sound, have faced degraded environmental quality from various sources of air and water pollution. However, access to local air quality data is regionally scarce due to a lack of state-run monitoring stations, which has motivated local community science efforts. In January 2022, we co-developed a community-led study to investigate the relationship between fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and sources of regional air pollution, with a specific focus on previously identified emissions from cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (CyanoHABs). Using low-cost PurpleAir air quality sensors to quantify PM2.5 mass, satellite-derived indicators of CyanoHABs, and other publicly available atmospheric and meteorological data, we assessed environmental drivers of PM2.5 mass in the airshed of the Albemarle Sound estuary during 2022-2023. We found that bias-corrected PurpleAir PM2.5 mass concentrations aligned with composite data from the three nearest federal reference equivalent measurements within 1 µg/m3 on average, and that the temporal variation in PM2.5 was most closely associated with changes in criteria air pollutants. Ultimately, satellite-based indicators of CyanoHABs (Microcystis spp. equivalent cell counts and bloom spatial extent) were not strongly associated with ambient/episodic increases in PurpleAir PM2.5 mass during our study period. For the first time, we provide local PM2.5 measurements to rural communities in northeastern NC with an assessment of environmental drivers of PM2.5 pollution events. Additional compositional analyses of PM2.5 are warranted to further inform respiratory risk assessments for this region of NC. Despite the lack of correlation between CyanoHABs and PM2.5 observed, this work serves to inform future studies that seek to employ widely available and low-cost approaches to monitor both CyanoHAB aerosol emissions and general air quality in rural coastal regions at high spatial and temporal resolutions.
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BibTeX Citation
@article{pl02000c, author={Plaas, H. E. and Karl, C. and Cogbill, R. and Rosales-Garcia, N. and Stoop, A. H. and Satterwhite, L. L. and Mathieu-Campbell, M. E. and Richmond-Bryant, J. and Paerl, H. W. and Hamilton, D. S.}, title={CyanoHABs and CAPs: Assessing community-based monitoring of PM2.5 with regional sources of pollution in rural, northeastern North Carolina}, year={2025}, journal={Environ. Sci. Atmos.}, doi={10.1039/D5EA00020C}, }
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RIS Citation
TY - JOUR ID - pl02000c AU - Plaas, H. E. AU - Karl, C. AU - Cogbill, R. AU - Rosales-Garcia, N. AU - Stoop, A. H. AU - Satterwhite, L. L. AU - Mathieu-Campbell, M. E. AU - Richmond-Bryant, J. AU - Paerl, H. W. AU - Hamilton, D. S. PY - 2025 TI - CyanoHABs and CAPs: Assessing community-based monitoring of PM2.5 with regional sources of pollution in rural, northeastern North Carolina JA - Environ. Sci. Atmos. DO - 10.1039/D5EA00020C ER -
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