4.7 Article

Greener residential environment is associated with increased bacterial diversity in outdoor ambient air

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 880, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163266

Keywords

Microbiome; Outdoor air; Greenspace; Airborne Bacteria; Aerobiome; 16S rRNA

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Exposure to greenspace in urban areas has been shown to benefit human health. This study examined the relationship between vegetated land and tree cover near residences and outdoor ambient air bacterial diversity and composition, finding that higher vegetated land and tree cover were associated with increased bacterial diversity.
In urban areas, exposure to greenspace has been found to be beneficial to human health. The biodiversity hypothesis proposed that exposure to diverse ambient microbes in greener areas may be one pathway leading to health benefits such as improved immune system functioning, reduced systemic inflammation, and ultimately reduced morbidity and mortality. Previous studies observed differences in ambient outdoor bacterial diversity between areas of high and low vegetated land cover but didn't focus on residential environments which are important to human health. This research examined the relationship between vegetated land and tree cover near residence and outdoor ambient air bacterial di-versity and composition. We used a filter and pump system to collect ambient bacteria samples outside residences in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill metropolitan area and identified bacteria by 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. Geospatial quantification of total vegetated land or tree cover was conducted within 500 m of each residence. Shannon's diversity index and weighted UniFrac distances were calculated to measure alpha (within-sample) and beta (between-sample) diversity, respectively. Linear regression for alpha-diversity and permutational analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) for beta-diversity were used to model relationships between vegetated land and tree cover and bacterial diversity. Data analysis included 73 ambient air samples collected near 69 residences. Analysis of beta-diversity demonstrated differences in ambient air microbiome composition between areas of high and low vegetated land (p = 0.03) and tree cover (p = 0.07). These relationships remained consistent among quintiles of vegetated land (p = 0.03) and tree cover (p = 0.008) and contin-uous measures of vegetated land (p = 0.03) and tree cover (p = 0.03). Increased vegetated land and tree cover were also associated with increased ambient microbiome alpha-diversity (p = 0.06 and p = 0.03, respectively). To our knowl-edge, this is the first study to demonstrate associations between vegetated land and tree cover and the ambient air microbiome's diversity and composition in the residential ecosystem.

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