Dushanbe | Pollen & Air Quality
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Seasonal Pollen Calendar — Tajikistan
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Pollen levels vary by region due to differences in vegetation and land use. The app groups cities into five zones:
- Dushanbe/DRS: baseline, urban tree-heavy (poplar, plane tree)
- Khatlon: agricultural lowlands, higher grass pollen
- Sughd: Ferghana Valley, mixed orchards and rice
- GBAO/Pamir: sparse alpine vegetation, much lower pollen
- Mountain valleys: mid-altitude, moderate levels
Weather conditions shift throughout the day, so pollen risk does too. The app splits the day into three periods:
- Morning: 6 AM to 12 PM
- Afternoon: 12 PM to 6 PM
- Evening: 6 PM to 12 AM
Pollen allergies can trigger reactions to certain foods — called Oral Allergy Syndrome (OAS). Proteins in these foods resemble pollen allergens, causing tingling or itching in the mouth.
- Birch: apples, cherries, apricots, peaches, pears, hazelnuts, carrots, celery
- Mugwort: celery, carrots, cumin, coriander, sunflower seeds, chamomile tea
- Grasses: wheat flour, tomatoes, watermelon, melon, oranges
- Ragweed: watermelon, cantaloupe, banana, zucchini, cucumber
Cooking or peeling usually eliminates the reaction, as heat breaks down the cross-reactive proteins.
- Ozone (O₃): forms in sunlight, irritates airways, peaks afternoons. WHO: ≤100 µg/m³.
- PM2.5: fine particles that penetrate lungs. Carries pollen fragments. WHO: ≤15 µg/m³.
- PM10: coarse particles including pollen grains. WHO: ≤45 µg/m³.
- NO₂: from vehicles/power plants, inflames airways. WHO: ≤25 µg/m³.
- SO₂: from fossil fuels, constricts airways. WHO: ≤40 µg/m³.
- CO: from combustion, reduces blood oxygen. WHO: ≤4 mg/m³.
The US Air Quality Index is a standardized scale from 0 to 500 that measures how clean or polluted the air is and what health effects may be a concern.
- Good (0–50): air quality is satisfactory
- Moderate (51–100): acceptable, but sensitive individuals may be affected
- Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups (101–150): limit exposure
- Unhealthy (151–200): everyone may experience effects
- Very Unhealthy (201–300): health alert
- Hazardous (301–500): emergency conditions
The UV (Ultraviolet) Index measures the intensity of ultraviolet radiation from the sun on a scale from 0 to 11+.
- Low (0–2): minimal risk
- Moderate (3–5): seek shade during midday
- High (6–7): sunscreen and protective clothing recommended
- Very High (8–10): avoid midday sun exposure
- Extreme (11+): take all precautions
The Air Quality Index (AQI) on this dashboard is computed from satellite data. Here is how each number is derived.
- All readings come from CAMS (Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service), a satellite-based atmospheric model operated by the European Union. It divides the globe into 45 km grid cells and updates every 12 hours. As of 2026, Tajikistan has no public ground-based air quality sensors.
- The composite US AQI score equals the highest sub-index among six pollutants: fine particles (PM2.5), coarse particles (PM10), ground-level ozone (O₃), nitrogen dioxide (NO₂), sulfur dioxide (SO₂), and carbon monoxide (CO). If any single pollutant is elevated, it determines the overall score.
- The WHO badge compares PM2.5 against two thresholds: the 24-hour guideline (15 µg/m³, the relevant standard for a current reading) and the annual target (5 µg/m³, a long-term exposure goal). Most of Central Asia exceeds the annual target year-round due to regional dust and arid climate.
- CAMS reports a regional average across its 45 km grid cell, which smooths out local variation. Street-level pollution near roads and construction sites can be significantly higher than the satellite value, especially in dense urban areas with heavy traffic.
Reference: WHO Global Air Quality Guidelines (2021)