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Bioaerosols are an important component of the total atmospheric aerosol load, with implications for human health, climate feedbacks and the distribution and dispersal of microbial taxa. Bioaerosols are sourced from marine, freshwater and terrestrial surfaces, with different mechanisms potentially responsible for releasing biological particles from these substrates. Little is known about the production of freshwater and terrestrial bioaerosols in polar regions. We used portable collection devices to test for the presence of picocyanobacterial aerosols above freshwater and soil substrates in the southwestern Greenland tundra and the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica. We show that picocyanobacterial cells are present in the near-surface air at concentrations ranging from 2,431 to 28,355 cells m of air, with no significant differences among substrates or between polar regions. Our concentrations are lower than those measured using the same methods in temperate ecosystems. We suggest that aerosolization is an important process linking terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in these polar environments, and that future work is needed to explore aerosolization mechanisms and taxon-specific aerosolization rates. Our study is a first step toward understanding the production of bioaerosols in extreme environments dominated by microbial life.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1758-2229.12832 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
May 2025
Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, United States.
Cyanobacteria are important primary producers, sources of secondary metabolites, and sentinels of environmental change in aquatic ecosystems - including large estuaries. Here, we newly investigated cyanobacterial diversity within the Albemarle Pamlico Sound System (APES) using (16S rRNA) gene amplicon sequencing analyses. Substantial cyanobacterial diversity including lineages lacking current isolates were recovered (46 genera, 17 potentially cyanotoxic), with oligohaline waters of the Albemarle Sound and its tributaries being notable regional hotspot for diversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Microbiol
May 2025
Department of Biology, Portland State University, PO Box 751, Portland, OR 97201, USA. Electronic address:
The Earth's most abundant photosynthetic cells, the picocyanobacteria - Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus - play a fundamental global role in aquatic ecosystems. The success of these picocyanobacteria is interpreted through a cross-scale systems framework that integrates bottom-up controls on growth (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
November 2024
Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119992 Moscow, Russia.
Planktonic unicellular cyanobacteria are the dominant biomass producers and carbon fixers in the global ocean ecosystem, but they are not abundant in polar seawater. The interseasonal dynamics of picocyanobacterial (PC) abundance, picophytoplankton primary production, and phylogenetic diversity of PC were studied in the sub-Arctic White Sea. The PC abundance varied from 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmBio
November 2024
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
is a diverse picocyanobacterial genus and the most abundant phototroph on Earth. Its photosynthetic diversity divides it into high-light (HL)- or low-light (LL)-adapted groups representing broad phylogenetic grades-each composed of several monophyletic clades. Here, we physiologically characterize four new strains isolated from below the deep chlorophyll maximum in the North Pacific Ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
November 2023
Institute of Marine Environment and Ecology, National Taiwan Ocean University, 2 Pei-Ning Road, Keelung 20224, Taiwan.