Journal
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 307, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.119842
Keywords
Monsoon; Bacteria; Fungi; Atmosphere; Long-range transport
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This study used high-throughput sequencing to investigate the succession of airborne microbial communities on an island in Pearl River Estuary under the influence of summer and winter monsoons. The results showed rapid changes in airborne microbial communities, especially fungal aerosols, during different monsoon seasons. The changes in air temperature and relative humidity caused by monsoons were found to be the most important factors driving the airborne microbial communities during the summer monsoon. Additionally, terrestrial sources, particularly soil, made the greatest contribution to airborne bacteria.
Airborne microbes can survive in the atmosphere, travel intercontinental distances by air mass movement, and colonize in remote area through dry and wet deposition, thus forming a connection between oceanic, atmospheric, and terrestrial systems. However, studies linking the monsoon and bioaerosol transport are extremely rare. Here we applied high-throughput sequencing to investigate airborne microbial community succession on an island in Pearl River Estuary under summer and winter monsoon influence. The microbial communities from local potential sources (i.e., soil, leaf and surface seawater), water-soluble ions, organic carbon and elemental carbon were used to evaluate marine and terrestrial contribution. Our results revealed that airborne microbial communities underwent rapid changes during different monsoons influence (ANOSIM, P < 0.005), especially fungal aerosol. Fungal aerosols were dominant by Cladosporium, Debaryomyces, Rhodotorula, Fusarium, Aureobasidium and Candida during winter monsoon, while Coriolopsis, Ceriporia, Fomes, Phanerochaete, Trametes, Phlebia, and Antrodia were predominant fungal genera during summer monsoon. Redundant analysis showed that changes of air temperature and relative humidity caused by monsoon were the most important driven factors of airborne microbial communities in summer monsoon for airborne microbial communities. In addition, terrestrial sources were the most important contribution, especially that of soil for airborne bacteria. Some taxa were affected by atmospheric transport influenced by monsoon synoptic air mass movement.
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