RESUMEN
This research aims to assess air quality in a transitional location between city and forest in the Amazon region. Located downwind of the Manaus metropolitan region, this study is part of the large-scale experiment GoAmazon2014/5. Based on their pollutant potential, inhalable particulate matter (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), ozone (O3), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and meta-, orto-, para-xylene (BTEX) were selected for analysis. Sampling took place during the wet season (March-April 2014) and dry season (August-October 2014). The number of forest fires in the surroundings was higher during the dry wet season. Results show significant increase during the dry season in mass concentration (wet: <0.01-10⯵gâ¯m-3; dry: 9.8-69⯵gâ¯m-3), NH4+ soluble content (wet: 13-125⯵gâ¯m-3; dry: 86-323⯵gâ¯m-3) and K+ soluble content (wet: 11-168⯵gâ¯m-3; dry 60-356⯵gâ¯m-3) of the PM2.5, and O3 levels (wet: 1.4-14⯵gâ¯m-3; dry: 1.0-40⯵gâ¯m-3), indicating influence of biomass burning emissions. BTEX concentrations were low in both periods, but also increased during the dry season. A weak correlation in the time series of the organic and inorganic gaseous pollutants indicates a combination of different sources in both seasons and NO2 results suggest a spatial heterogeneity in gaseous pollutants levels beyond initial expectations.