Abstract

Dryland ecosystems, which vary sensitively to drought owing to climate change and human activities, frequently cause large-scale aeolian dispersal of terrestrial-mineral and biological particles. To date, very few studies have focused on the atmosphere-land exchange of bacteria in drylands. To understand the bacterial transport from the terrestrial environment to the atmosphere over drylands, soil and aerosol samples were collected at 19 sites in arid and semi-arid regions across drylands of China in the summer of 2017. The 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that the bacterial diversity in the atmosphere was significantly lower than that in terrestrial ecosystems for all the collected samples. Moreover, bacterial diversity in the atmosphere increases in arid regions compared to semi-arid regions, while those of the terrestrial environment were maintained regardless of the region. Additionally, the terrestrial bacterial sources contributed to the airborne bacteria more significantly in arid regions than those in semi-arid regions (accounting for 10.0 ± 1.1% and 3.5 ± 1.1%, respectively). The arid conditions tended to enhance the atmospheric emissions of Chloroflexi, while the members of Bacteroidetes were dominant in both the atmospheres of the semi-arid and arid regions. The differences in bacterial community structures between the terrestrial and atmospheric ecosystems are thought to depend on the ground surface characteristics such as vegetation and terrestrial substrates. Meteorological drought may alter terrestrial characteristics, which regulate airborne bacterial dispersal from dryland to its downwind regions, suggesting that more attention should be paid to the bacterial roles in the biology-health-climate process in the future.

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