Abstract

A set of simultaneously collected quantitative measurements of 12 meteorological and 6 culturable atmospheric bacterial (CAB) variables was made over a grass seed field during several early, mid, and late summer days. The observation site was located between the Cascade and Coastal Mountain Ranges near Corvallis in the Willamette Valley, Oregon. Principal component analysis identified those meteorological variables that had the highest loadings in six eigenvectors that account for 95.9% of variation in the data factors, i.e., temperature @ 6.3 m above ground level (AGL), wind velocity @ 10.0 m AGL, wind velocity difference @ 1.7–10.0 m, barometric pressure, wind direction standard deviation, and wind direction. When these variables were used in a cluster analysis, they formed three statistically distinct meteorological variable clusters with means at ca. “midnight”, ca. “midday”, and ca. “evening.” The highest mean density of CAB (i.e., 153.4 ± 162.5 CFU/m3) was associated with the “midday” meteorological Cluster-1 that had warm, dry “gentle breezes” from the southeast, in the relatively bacteria loaded Willamette Valley air. The lowest mean density of CAB (i.e., 35.5 ± 24.1 CFU/m3) was associated with meteorological Cluster-3 in the late afternoon and “evening” occurring during the hottest and driest part of the day with “fresh breezes” coming from the north northwest in air off the Pacific Ocean. Finally, the last cluster, Cluster-2 occurred about midnight and had an intermediate density of CAB (74.2 ± 76.2 CFU/m3) in “light air” coming from the northwest, perhaps off the Pacific Ocean. The CAB associated with each of the three meteorological clusters was only partially statistically distinct. Partially because the CAB in both the Pacific Ocean derived air masses of the “evening” Cluster-3 and “midnight” Cluster-2 were not statically separable, though both were statistically separable from the midday, Willamette Valley derived Cluster-1. Further indicating their common source, both Pacific Ocean derived air masses had very similar percentages of pigmented bacteria, which were dissimilar to the pigmented bacterial population density in the Willamette Valley air masses. In short, it is speculated that “midnight” atmosphere may simply contain the settling concentrated residual bacterial particles in the abated fresh Pacific Ocean breezes after sundown. It is clearly shown that with the methods employed, it is possible to associate the uniqueness of the quantity, and to a lesser extent the quality, of the CAB population with the atmospheric conditions reported herein. From this project comes speculation that the strategies relating the quasi-conservative bacterial populations associated with distinct but nonconservative air mass properties can help to better understand more of the bacterial dynamics found in such situations. And to a further extent, molecular biological methods could be applied to identify bacterial taxa in specific air masses.

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