Abstract

Land use influences the composition of near-surface airborne bacterial communities, and bacteria can be transported through the atmosphere at global scales. The atmosphere mixes vertically, but rigorously assessing whether the effects of land use on atmospheric communities extends to higher altitudes requires examining communities from multiple altitudes collected at a stable location and timeframe. In this study, we collected near-surface (<2 m) and higher-altitude (150 m) air samples from three sites in an agricultural/developed location and a forested/undeveloped location. We used bacterial 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to compare communities and predict functionality by altitude. Higher-altitude and near-surface communities did not differ in composition within each location. Communities collected above the undeveloped location were equally variable at both altitudes; higher-altitude samples from the developed location predominantly contained Firmicutes and were less variable than near-surface samples. We also compared airborne taxa to those present in soil and snow. Communities from higher-altitude samples above the developed location contained fewer overlapping taxa with soil and snow sources, and overlapping Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) among the three sources differed by location. Our results suggest that land use affects the composition of both near-surface and higher-altitude airborne bacterial communities and, therefore, may influence broad bacterial dispersal patterns. This small-scale pilot study provides a framework for simultaneously examining local and regional airborne microbial communities that can be applied to larger studies or studies using different types of samplers.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric transport is a major mechanism for microbial dispersal to all global ecosystems, and it is estimated that there are between 105 and 106 cells in each cubic meter of air [1,2]

  • The results of our pilot study suggest that the effects of land use development extend to the composition of higher-altitude airborne bacterial communities, but development influences the connectivity between airborne bacterial communities and terrestrial sources

  • Our results suggest that the land use over which an air mass travels can influence the composition of airborne bacterial communities at multiple altitudes, and the local connectivity between atmospheric and terrestrial bacterial communities

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric transport is a major mechanism for microbial dispersal to all global ecosystems, and it is estimated that there are between 105 and 106 cells in each cubic meter of air [1,2]. Due to their small size and low sedimentation rates, microorganisms, which include bacteria, fungi and microeukaryotes, can remain airborne for long periods of time and be transported over intercontinental distances (e.g., [3,4,5,6,7,8]).

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