Abstract
Biogenic volatile organic compounds (bVOCs), synthesised by plants, are important mediators of ecological interactions that can also undergo a series of reactions in the atmosphere. Ground-level ozone is a secondary pollutant generated through sunlight-driven reactions between nitrogen oxides (NOx) and VOCs. Its levels have increased since the industrial revolution and reactions involving ozone drive many chemical processes in the troposphere. While ozone precursors often originate in urban areas, winds may carry these hundreds of kilometres, causing ozone formation to also occur in less populated rural regions. Under elevated ozone conditions, ozonolysis of bVOCs can result in quantitative and qualitative changes in the gas phase, reducing the concentrations of certain bVOCs and resulting in the formation of other compounds. Such changes can result in disruption of bVOC-mediated behavioural or ecological interactions. Through a series of gas-phase experiments using Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) and Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometry (PTR-MS), we investigated the products and their yields from the ozonolysis of a range of ubiquitous bVOCs, which were selected because of their importance in mediating ecological interactions such as pollinator and natural enemy attraction and plant-to-plant communication, namely: (E)-β-ocimene, isomers of α and β-farnesene, α-terpinene and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one. New products from the ozonolysis of these compounds were identified, and the formation of these compounds is consistent with terpene-ozone oxidation mechanisms. We present the degradation mechanism of our model bVOCs and identify their reaction products. We discuss the potential ecological implications of the degradation of each bVOC and of the formation of reaction products.
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Introduction
Biogenic volatile organic compounds (bVOCs) are a distinct group of secondary metabolites, synthesized and emitted by plants, with various functional roles in plant ecology (Loreto et al. 2014; Pierik et al. 2014). Globally, the biogenic fraction of total VOC emissions outweighs other anthropogenic VOC sources by as much as an order of magnitude (Guenther et al. 1995; (Böge et al. 2013). Mostly lipophilic and marked by high vapour pressure, bVOCs are a diverse group of compounds broadly categorized as terpenoids, benzenoids, phenylpropanoids, fatty acid derivatives and nitrogen and sulphur containing compounds (Dudareva et al. 2004, 2013). Ecologically, bVOCs can function as plant defence compounds against biotic and abiotic stressors and can mediate plant interactions with other organisms across trophic levels (Holopainen 2004; Loreto et al. 2014; Pierik et al. 2014). Terpenoids constitute the largest and most diverse group of bVOCs and follow a basic biosynthesis pathway - the formation of basic C5 (hemiterpene) units, which further condense in groups of two or three to form C10 (monoterpenes), C15 (sesquiterpenes) and C20 (diterpenes) products, most of which have high enough vapour pressures to be released into the air from plant tissues under normal atmospheric conditions (Dudareva et al. 2004).
Terpenoids are one of the most important bVOC groups with functional roles in ecology (Vickers et al. 2009) and atmospheric chemistry (Fehsenfeld et al.1992), they can be induced and emitted in higher quantities as plant defence responses under a range of abiotic and oxidative stresses (Loreto and Schnitzler 2010). Plants may also emit terpenes in response to herbivore feeding and/or oviposition to deter herbivory or to attract herbivore natural enemies (Büchel et al. 2011; Boncan et al. 2020). Common terpenoids like the monoterpene (E)-β-ocimene and the sesquiterpene (E,E)-α-farnesene have been confirmed to attract herbivore natural enemies through behavioural studies (Dicke et al. 1990; Agrawal et al. 2002). Terpenes also form part of floral bVOC bouquets used as foraging cues for beneficial insects like pollinators (Schiestl 2010). Upon release into the atmosphere, terpenes can act as precursors in the formation of tropospheric ozone (O3) and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particles, these oxidation reactions may undermine their ecological functions especially in polluted atmospheres (Pinto et al. 2010; Blande et al. 2014). Due to their structural characteristics, being mostly unsaturated hydrocarbons with one or more carbon-carbon double bonds, terpenes are classified among the most reactive compounds found in the atmosphere, with lifetimes that range from minutes to hours (Atkinson and Arey 2003). Consequently, they are highly reactive with atmospheric constituents such as O3, nitrate radicals (NO3) at night, hydroxyl radicals (OH) during the day, and chlorine radicals (Cl) at coastal sites, leading to the disruption of their ecological function (McFrederick et al. 2009; Blande et al. 2014; Masoud and Ruiz 2021; Ryalls et al. 2022a, b, c) and the formation of various oxidation products (Laaksonen et al. 2008).
The ozonolysis of terpenes proceeds via a complex series of reactions and intermediates. The ozonolysis reaction initiates by a concerted cycloaddition of O3 to the various carbon-carbon double bonds of terpene to form cyclic 1, 2, 3-trioxolane intermediates where a three-oxygen atom bridge is inserted while a sigma bond remains between the two carbon atoms (Criegee 1975). These highly unstable species, commonly named primary ozonides (POZ), decompose rapidly to form carbonyl molecules (aldehydes or ketones) and oxide reactive intermediates, referred to as ‘Criegee Intermediates’ (CI), by the cleavage of the remaining carbon-carbon and single oxygen-oxygen bonds (Criegee 1975; Aschmann and Atkinson 1994; Atkinson 2000). The carbonyl oxide has ample internal energy to prompt unimolecular reactions or collisional stabilization. The carbonyl oxide, either undergoes a ring closure to dioxirane or hydrogen migration to a hydroperoxide intermediate. The hydroperoxide subsequently undergoes isomerization or decomposition, which leads to formation of OH, carbonyls, carbon dioxide, and a variety of other products, some of which are key precursors for SOA (Aschmann and Atkinson 1994).
Terpenes are known to contribute to the tropospheric formation of O3 via interactions with nitric oxide, and to SOA formation as a result of the gas-to-particle conversion of their oxidation products (Ma et al. 2009). Biotic and abiotic stressors on plants cause an increase in bVOC production and SOA yields (Mentel et al. 2013; Joutsensaari et al. 2015; Yli-Pirila et al. 2016). SOA represent an important component of atmospheric fine particulate matter that has potential impacts on the climate, air quality, human health and plant ecology (Camredon et al. 2010). Vegetation surfaces represent a significant sink for VOCs and their SOA products, and the effects of these depositions on plant ecology are just beginning to be explored (Holopainen et al. 2017; Mofikoya et al. 2020). Particulate matter has received significant attention over many years e.g., because blue haze formation occurs due to terpene oxidation in forested regions (Went 1960). In particular, the generation of SOA from the oxidation of terpenes has been studied intensively in order to identify and quantify oxidation products and to understand reaction mechanisms, which are crucial for atmospheric SOA formation (Holopainen et al. 2017). Research has also been conducted to understand their potential ecological impacts e.g., through their deposition on plant surfaces changing herbivore responses (Li et al. 2016). Therefore, a clear understanding of the reaction of O3 with terpenes commonly emitted by plants is vital to establish the potential impacts of air pollution on critical ecological processes.
The objective of the current study was to investigate the ozonolysis of specific ubiquitous bVOCs under O3 pollution scenarios that commonly occur in nature, including O3 excess, VOC excess, and equal concentrations of O3 and VOC. Ozone concentrations in nature can vary significantly, with background concentrations in the Northern hemisphere ranging from 25 to 50 ppb, increasing at a rate of 0.2 -2% per year (Vingarzan 2004), but in localised high pollution episodes concentrations in excess of 200 ppb have been recorded (Air Quality Expert Group 2021). Within the proximity of plant vegetation or a flower from which VOCs are released, VOC concentrations are commonly greater than O3. As the VOC plume moves away from the plant or flower, VOC concentration will be diluted in the wider body of air and therefore there will be a point at which the ratio of VOC to O3 will approach 1:1, after which further dilution will result in O3 excess. We tested the hypothesis that ozonolysis of the four model VOCs selected for this study will result in the loss of the primary VOC and the formation of ecologically/behaviourally active reaction products at ecologically relevant timescales. Through a series of gas-phase experiments using Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) and Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometry (PTR-MS), we investigated the products and their formation over time from the ozonolysis of (E)-β-ocimene, isomers of α and β-farnesene, α-terpinene and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one. These VOCs were selected because of their ubiquity and importance in ecological interactions such as attraction of pollinators and natural enemies, and for plant-to-plant communication (Dicke et al. 1990; Agrawal et al. 2002; Knudsen et al. 2006).
Methods and Materials
Chemicals and Materials
The compounds studied and their structures are presented in Table 1. (E)-β-ocimene was purchased from Bedoukian Research Inc. (95.7% (E)-β-ocimene and 2.8% (Z)-β-ocimene). Isomers of α and β-farnesene, α-terpinene (≥ 95% purity) and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (99% purity) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich®/Merck at high purity. Compounds were degassed before use by repeated freeze-pump-thaw cycles.
SPME Fibres
Gas phase ozonolysis products of the study compounds were collected for analysis on solid phase microextraction (SPME) fibres. A fused-silica fibre coated with 50/30 µm coating Divinylbenzene Carboxen Polydimethylsiloxane (DVB-CX PDMS) (Supelco) was the most efficient fibre among others we tested (PDMS and polyacrylate) during preliminary trials, due to the efficient adsorption to its multilayer coating of the oxygenated products obtained. Before use the fibres were conditioned in a GC inlet according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Ozone and Sample Preparation
Ozone was generated as a mixture in oxygen (O2) by passing O2 through an A2Z 20G Lab Model O3 generator (A2Z Ozone Inc, Louisville, Kentucky, USA), and its purity was determined by UV spectroscopy at λ = 254 nm using a dedicated cell with CaF2 windows (Pike Technologies). For each experiment a mixture of the VOC under study and cyclohexane as an OH radical scavenger was prepared in an 80 L collapsible Teflon chamber (Adtech Polymer Engineering Ltd) using dry synthetic air (N2 + 20 ± 2% O2, Air Liquide) as a diluent gas (see Stewart et al. 2013 for procedure details). Typical hydrocarbon concentrations employed were 4.9 × 1012 molecule cm−3. The VOC and O3 concentrations for each experiment are detailed in Supplementary Tables S1-S4. A range of values were investigated to allow us to identify as wide a range of potential products as possible from the studies, therefore we conducted experiments where O3 was in excess, where VOC was in excess and where O3 and VOC were introduced in a 1:1 ratio. Cyclohexane concentrations were determined using the rate coefficients of the terpene and the scavenger reaction with OH radicals, so that > 95% of OH radicals were scavenged. Experiments were conducted in the absence of cyclohexane because during the GC-MS analyses (see below), cyclohexane dominated the chromatograms at shorter retention times (ca. 2.2 min), making identification of faster eluting compounds challenging. While the reported rate coefficients (e.g. Smith et al. 1996; Kim et al. 2011) differ by ca. 5 to 6 orders of magnitude when comparing the VOCs’ reactivity towards O3 and OH, we found no evidence of interference of OH radicals when comparing experimental runs with and without scavenger. We demonstrated, for example by conducting seven experimental runs using the scavenger for 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (Table S4), that the results with and without scavenger were consistent. Prior to each experiment, the chamber was thoroughly cleaned by purging with synthetic air. Experiments were carried out by admitting a known concentration of O3 into a 1 L Pyrex reaction chamber and adding a sample of the hydrocarbon mixture from the Teflon bag such that a total pressure of 1 atmosphere (760 ± 10 Torr) was achieved. Experiments were carried out at 298 ± 2 oK. Sufficient time (ca. 60 min) was allowed for reactions to take place and for products to be adsorbed on a solid phase microextraction (SPME) fibre. An SPME syringe needle was inserted into the reaction chamber through a SUPELCO Thermogreen™ septum (7/16”); the plunger was depressed to allow the VOC products adsorption onto the fibre coating.
GC-MS Analysis
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry was used to facilitate identification of the products generated in the ozonolysis studies. Product analysis was carried out using a Thermo Scientific Finnigan Trace GC-MS operated in EI mode (70 eV) by injecting the SPME fibre into the inlet of the GC. No pre-concentration or pre-treatment of the samples were necessary (Lee et al. 2006). We selected not to conduct chemical derivatisation of the ozonolysis products because this approach is known to induce artefacts and peak identification uncertainties (Jaoui et al. 2003). The oven temperature was initially held at 40 °C then increased linearly to 200 °C at 10 °C / min. The GC inlet was kept at 220 °C and the gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer interface temperature was 250 °C. Compound separation was carried out on an RTx-5MS capillary column (30 m, 0.25 mm ID, 0.25 μm, Restek Thames). High purity helium (99.995%, Air Liquide) was used as a carrier gas. Masses were scanned in the 25 to 250 amu range. At least eight chromatograms were collected for each VOC (Tables S1-S4). Only peaks that appeared consistently, were symmetrical, well resolved and with signal-to-noise ratios clearly above those of blank runs, were taken into consideration when identifying terpene oxidation products. Most VOC degradation products were consistently observed across all experimental data sets and showed very similar fragmentation patterns under most experimental conditions.
PTR-MS Analysis
To investigate the timescales over which degradation of gas-phase parent terpenes and formation of their oxidation products occurred, additional measurements were made using PTR-MS (Ionicon Analytik GmbH, Austria). Air was sampled from a collapsible Teflon chamber (Adtech Polymer Engineering Ltd) using Teflon tubing and pulled through a 0.45 μm pore size Whatman PTFE particulate filter before entering the PTR-MS. Dry synthetic air (Air Liquide) was used as a diluent gas in these measurements. The PTR-MS was a quadrupole mass spectrometer that uses hydronium ions (H3O+) to chemically ionize the compound of interest through a proton transfer reaction. Thus, compounds with a proton affinity higher than that of water can be detected by the PTR-MS and were identified by their mass to charge ratios (m/z). However, compounds with the same molecular weight cannot be distinguished by PTR-MS, since this method identifies compounds alone by their molecular weight plus one (H+) and operates at unit mass resolution. The increase of count rates for certain ions indicates the formation of oxidation products. Possible oxidation products are presented in this work based on the oxidation mechanisms of the parent terpene. PTR-MS data were collected at drift tube voltages of 500 V, 550 and 600 V which corresponded to E/N ratios of 122 Td, 134 Td and 147 Td (1 Townsend, Td = 10−17cm2V molecule−1), respectively. Where, E is the electric field and N is the number density of molecules in the drift tube.
Oxidation Product Identification
Oxidation compounds for which a standard was commercially available were confirmed by comparison of the mass spectra of the compound with the authentic spectra run in the same experimental conditions (acetaldehyde, acrylic acid, 3-methylfuran-2,5-dione and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one); retention time was used as an additional confirmation of the product. All compounds recorded on blank SPME fibres and background peaks were eliminated prior to identification of product peaks. Only mass spectra of symmetrical and well resolved GC peaks were taken into consideration when identifying terpene oxidation products. In some cases, it was not possible to associate some spectral peaks with a compound or a structure due to the complexity of assigning structure/functional groups to those mass spectra and the lack of authentic standards.
Results and discussion
New products from the reaction of O3 with (E)-β-ocimene, isomers of α and β-farnesene, α-terpinene and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one were identified. The main oxidation products are summarized in Table 2. The compounds identified in this work are consistent with the terpene-O3 oxidation mechanisms (see Scheme 1 for ozonolysis mechanisms for (E)-β-ocimene; for a partial mechanism for α-terpinene see Lee et al. 2006; for a detailed ozonolysis mechanism of α and β-farnesene see Jaoui et al. 2017; for 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one a full ozonolysis mechanism has not yet been proposed to our knowledge beyond that described by Leonardo et al. 2008, which was limited to computational methods).
(E)-β-Ocimene Oxidation Products
Scheme 1 displays a simplified mechanism for the degradation of (E)-β-ocimene illustrating the major products we identified in square boxes. An oxidation product with a molecular weight of 110 was observed from OH and O3 reactions with (E)-β-ocimene (Table 2, Fig. S1). The fragmentation pattern showed characteristic losses of CH3, CO and HCO from the molecular ion. This indicates the formation of a C7 aldehyde from the cleavage of a C3H6 radical from (E)-β-ocimene to form 4-methylhexa-3,5-dienal (see primary ozonide (POZ) 1 channel to the left in Scheme 1). This is consistent with the previously reported formation of this compound (Calogirou et al. 1999; Reissell et al. 2002; Baker et al. 2004); recent work has estimated that POZ 1 is the main channel contributing ca. 85% (Jenkin et al. 2020).
While only a minor channel according to Jenkin et al. (2020) and contributing less than 5%, we found evidence of POZ 2 formation: the cleavage of the double bond on C3 of (E)-β-ocimene leads to formation of POZ 2 which rapidly decomposes to produce 4-methylpent-3-enoic acid (114 m/z) and but-3-en-2-one (see central channel in Scheme 1; consistent with Guanouni et al. (2020). Isomers of mass 72, acrylic acid and 2-oxopropanal (Fig. S2) may form from an intermediate radical (3-peroxybut-1-ene) and but-3-en-2-one, by delocalization of oxygen from the peroxy radical and the formation of a carbonyl group.
The cleavage of the C1 double bond of (E)-β-ocimene, forming POZ 3, leads to the formation of C7 carboxylic acids (contributing ca. 10% to the overall ozonolysis according to Jenkin et al. 2020), (E)-2,6-dimethylhepta-2,5-dienal of mass 138 and (E)-2,6-dimethylhepta-2,5-dienoic acid of mass 154. The formation of mass 154 (Scheme 1) has an energy barrier of 97.82 kcal mol−1 (Sun et al. 2011). The identification of the acid was based on the mass 154 fragmentation that shows a loss of M-17 and M-45 indicating the formation of a short-chain acid. Subsequently, the carbon-carbon double bond on the C2 of the acid may be attacked by O3 to form a carbonyl group resulting in a lower molecular weight acid, 2-oxopropanoic acid (88 m/z). Identification was based on the fragmentation spectra, which indicated the loss of CH3 M-15, and the loss of COOH M-45 (Fig. 1a). The oxidation product of mass 138 ((E)-2,6-dimethylhepta-2,5-dienal) may cleave the double bond at C5 to form a carbonyl resulting in (E)-2-methylpent-2-enedial (112 m/z). The mass spectrum (Fig. 1b) shows the fragmentation of the aldehyde with mass losses of M-15, M-28 and M-43 corresponding to CH3, CO and CH2-CH-O; this is indicative of the aldehyde formation with an ion mass of 112. The two products identified at 72 and 98 m/z (Figs. S2 and S3) can also form from the oxidation of (E)-4-methylhexa-3,5-dienal with OH and O3. The reaction rates of (E)-4-methylhexa-3,5-dienal with OH radical and O3 were estimated to be 1.61 ± 0.35 × 10−10 and 4.13 ± 0.81 × 10−17 cm3 molecule−1 s−1, respectively (Baker et al. 2004). The formation of a C6 aldehyde (m/z 98) may result from the breakdown of the endo/internal carbon-carbon double bond in (E)-β-ocimene. The fragmentation pattern of this aldehyde (Fig. S3) shows mass losses of M-18 (loss of water molecule), M-28 (loss of ethylene), M-29 (cleavage of COH+), M-43 (loss of CH2-CH-O) and M-44 (loss of CH2 = CH-OH). This product is identified as 4-methylpent-3-enal. The formation energies for C3H4O2 (m/z 72), C6H10O (m/z 98), C9H14O (m/z 138), C6H8O2 (m/z 112) and C9H14O2 (m/z 154) were estimated by density functional theory calculations (Sun et al. 2011). Formation of mass 138 has an energy barrier of only 26.97 kcal mol−1, while the formations of masses 98, 72 and 112 have potential barriers of 45.99, 50.77 and 51.92 kcal mol−1, respectively (Sun et al. 2011).
Other masses/molecular ions were also consistently observed from the GC-MS spectra, but due to the lack of commercial standards and the complexity of the mass spectra it was not possible to identify those products.
Isomers of α and β-Farnesene Oxidation Products
Gas-phase isomers of α and β-farnesene oxidation products are listed in Table 2. Low molecular weight products identified in this work are consistent with those reported by Jaoui et al. (2017). 2-oxopropanal (m/z 72) and a product of m/z 162 was identified as 4,5-dihydroxy-5-methyl-hexanoic acid (Jaoui et al. 2017). The spectra in the Supplementary information (Fig. S4) shows the fragmentation patterns that support the formation of this acid. An oxidation product of m/z 100 shows mass losses of M-29 and M-45. A product with a molecular weight of 206 was also observed from the ozonolysis (Fig. 2a). 4-methylhexa-2,4-dienal (m/z 110) was identified: its fragmentation pattern is consistent with the loss of masses 28 and 43. This product is formed from the degradation of α-farnesene; for a detailed ozonolysis mechanism for α and β-farnesene see Scheme in Jaoui et al. (2017). A product of mass 222 has a fragmentation pattern supporting the formation of an acid with mass losses of 15 and 45 (Fig. 2b).
Isomers of α and β-farnesene oxidise within approx. 30 min of the ozonolysis (see Fig. 3 for the time profile of the reaction determined by PTR-MS), forming a number of low molecular weight product ions at low concentrations. Kim et al. (2011) calculated the ozonolysis rate coefficients for α- and β-farnesene to be 10.4 × 10−16 and 8.74 × 10−16 cm3 molecule−1 s−1, respectively. The rapid ozonolysis of α and β-farnesene we confirmed here may have significant ecological implications such as O3 quenching in plants as detailed later.
α-Terpinene Oxidation Products
Seven major gas-phase α-terpinene oxidation products were observed in our experiments (Table 2 and Fig. S5). The oxidation of α-terpinene is more complicated than both (E)-β-ocimene, and α and β-farnesene. α-terpinene contains a ring structure with two endo double bonds. For the ozonolysis of α-terpinene high yields of first generation products are expected with low yields of second generation products (Lee et al. 2006). Lee et al. (2006) observed no high product yields except at m/z 138 which decreased by 50% in two hours. They proposed a partial mechanism including a product observed with a molecular ion of 142 m/z; several pathways were proposed for the formation of this product (Lee et al. 2006) consistent with the high yield of 6-methylheptane-2,5-dione (m/z 142) that we observed. Other compounds we observed have masses of 126 m/z and 124 m/z and are identified as 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (C8H14O) and 6-methyl-3,5-heptadien-2-one (C8H12O), respectively. 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one eluted at the same time as the commercial standard and their spectra were consistent with each other, which directly confirms the formation of this ketone. The fragmentation pattern for the product with m/z 124 shows peaks at 81, 99, 109 and 125 corresponding to mass losses of M-43, M-25, M-15 and M+1 (see Fig. 4a). The observation of 6-methylhepta-3,5-dien-2-one (C8H12O, m/z 124) is difficult to explain in terms of the currently assumed α-terpinene ozonolysis reaction mechanism (compare e.g. Scheme in Lee et al. 2006).
The ozonolysis products of α-terpinene include m/z 156, 112 and 168; these were stable products and identified as 2-Hydroxy-2,6-dimethyl-hept-6-en-3-one (C9H16O2), 3-methylfuran-2,5-dione (C5H4O3) and 3,7-Dimethyl-6-oxo-2-octenal (C10H16O4), respectively (Table 2). The 3-methylfuran-2,5-dione (m/z 112) mass spectrum was compared with the commercial standard spectrum: the two spectra had very similar fragmentation patterns and eluted at the same time, directly confirming the identity of this product. The products of masses 112, 142, 156 and 168 formed are consistent with Lee et al. 2006.
6-Methyl-5-Hepten-2-One Oxidation Products
A compound of mass 72 was observed from the ozonolysis of 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one; with a loss of M-15 (for a CH3 removal), M-29 (for COH+) and M-43 it was identified as 2-oxopropanal. Another oxidation product of mass 100 was detected and identified as 4-oxopentanal (Fig. 4b).
The O3 reaction with 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one follows the Criegee mechanism of alkene ozonolysis described earlier. Previous studies employed density functional theory methods to determine the structure and energies of the reactant, intermediates, transition states and products (Leonardo et al. 2008). There are currently too few identified products to propose a full mechanism for this reaction, but our findings are consistent with the basic scheme proposed by Leonardo et al. (see Scheme in Leonardo et al. 2008).
Ecological Implications of Ozonolysis
bVOCs are emitted by vegetative and floral plant parts and are important for eliciting herbivore responses across trophic levels (Holopainen 2004; Knudsen et al. 2006). Terpenes as a bVOC group are critical for these interactions and our study emphasises their vulnerability to ozonolysis. The ubiquity of our selected compounds and the various ecological interactions they mediate raises the question of the fragility of those interactions under elevated O3 episodes. (E)-β-ocimene is involved in multiple interactions between plants and other organisms, especially as a generalist attractant to a wide spectrum of pollinators and in plant-to-plant communication (Farré-Armengol et al. 2017; Arimura et al. 2012). Ozonolysis of (E)-β-ocimene can lead to reductions in its atmospheric concentrations (McFrederick et al. 2008) and alter its attractiveness to herbivores and pollinators (Masui et al. 2020; Farré-Armengol et al. 2016). Some of the reaction products formed by the oxidation of (E)-β-ocimene identified in this study e.g., 4-methylhexa-3,5-dienal are common volatiles themselves (Reissell et al. 2002). Ozone concentrations are predicted to continue to rise (Vingarzan 2004; IPCC 2013); therefore, the reactions we define may lead to further reductions in the quantity and quality of odour cues available to foraging insects, which may affect the cues recipients, especially specialist insects that may have evolved specific receptors to a biogenic signal (McFrederick et al. 2009).
Those plant-pollinator interactions mediated by sesquiterpenes, including the farnesenes, are thus particularly vulnerable to disruption due to rapid ozonolysis (as confirmed by our PTR-MS results – Fig. 3) and the relatively long distance of the interactions they mediate (McFrederick et al. 2009). The rapid ozonolysis of the farnesenes also make them ideal for O3 quenching within plants (they are induced in response to biotic and abiotic stresses), although their overall oxidative stress protection capacity is not clear (Heiden et al. 1999; Palmer-Young et al. 2015). There is some evidence for changes in herbivore responses due to the ozonolysis of sesquiterpenes (Li and Blande 2015; Li et al. 2016), although whether those changes are due to loss of the sesquiterpene compound, or the formation of reaction products remains unclear. However, a recent study by Mofikoya et al. (2020) showed that the deposition of α-pinene oxidation products on cabbage plants reduced herbivore feeding and oviposition.
bVOCs are generally released by plants as a blend of multiple compounds in different ratios with a certain ratio of those compounds often being critical for eliciting herbivore responses (Bruce et al. 2005; Bruce and Pickett 2011). The ozonolysis of reactive compounds within a blend may alter the signal efficacy, particularly over longer distances (Blande et al. 2014; Farré-Armengol et al. 2016). It has been proposed that some oxidized forms of emitted compounds or fragments such as the C2-C6 fragments of monoterpenes may be of signalling value, along with the original compound, especially in long distance communication (Šimpraga et al. 2016). For example, 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (also known as sulcatone), a bVOC widely reported in the literature as being constitutively emitted, was shown to be an ozonolysis product of α-terpinene in the present study. 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one has previously been shown to be an ozonolysis product of the oxidation of sesquiterpenes on leaf surfaces (Fruekilde et al. 1998; Acton et al. 2018) and of squalene from human skin lipids (Wisthaler and Weschler 2010), and is known to elicit a variety of behavioural responses in a variety of insects, including herbivores and pollinators, acting in different species as a pheromone, an attractant and an allomone (e.g. Duffield et al. 1977; Du et al. 1998; Page et al. 2014). Another reaction product of α-terpinene, 6-methyl-3,5-heptadien-2-one, has previously been identified to be emitted from a number of orchids (Kaiser 1993) and has been identified from female Eastern larch beetles, Dendroctonus simplex, with potential function as a pheromone (Francke et al. 1995). However, most of the reaction products identified in this study are, to our knowledge, not currently known to elicit behavioural activity in any insect species, suggesting that for the VOCs in this study the primary mechanism by which ozonolysis is likely to influence insect behaviour is through the VOCs reduction rather than through the generation of alternative behaviourally active VOC reaction products.
Our results demonstrate the vulnerability of terpene-mediated communication to the ongoing increases in global tropospheric O3 concentrations. Our findings strongly encourage further research to elucidate the specific impacts of ozonolysis on the chemical ecology of the diverse range of ecological interactions mediated by such compounds, and on the potential wider impacts on insect and plant biodiversity and the ecosystem services these organisms provide.
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We thank Dr Kaan Alkan for experimental support.
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Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions This research was funded by Natural Environment Research Council grants (NE/P002404/1) and (NE/P001971/2). AM was supported by funding from the Finnish Cultural Foundation (Grant Nos. 00201238, 00212495).
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Touhami, D., Mofikoya, A.O., Girling, R.D. et al. Atmospheric Degradation of Ecologically Important Biogenic Volatiles: Investigating the Ozonolysis of (E)-β-Ocimene, Isomers of α and β-Farnesene, α-Terpinene and 6-Methyl-5-Hepten-2-One, and Their Gas-Phase Products. J Chem Ecol 50, 129–142 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-023-01467-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-023-01467-6