Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA

Snowfall is a global phenomenon highly integrated with hydrology and ecology. Forays into studying bioaerosols and their dependence on aeolian movement are largely constrained to either precipitation-independent analyses or in silico models. Though snowpack and glacial microbiological studies have b...

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Main Authors: Alexander S. Honeyman, Maria L. Day, John R. Spear
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/5961.pdf
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author Alexander S. Honeyman
Maria L. Day
John R. Spear
author_facet Alexander S. Honeyman
Maria L. Day
John R. Spear
author_sort Alexander S. Honeyman
collection DOAJ
description Snowfall is a global phenomenon highly integrated with hydrology and ecology. Forays into studying bioaerosols and their dependence on aeolian movement are largely constrained to either precipitation-independent analyses or in silico models. Though snowpack and glacial microbiological studies have been conducted, little is known about the biological component of meteoric snow. Through culture-independent phylogenetic and geochemical analyses, we show that the geographical location at which snow precipitates determines snowfall’s geochemical and microbiological composition. Storm-tracking, furthermore, can be used as a valuable environmental indicator to trace down what factors are influencing bioaerosols. We estimate annual aeolian snowfall deposits of up to ∼10 kg of bacterial/archaeal biomass per hectare along our study area of the eastern Front Range in Colorado. The dominant kinds of microbiota captured in an analysis of seven snow events at two different locations, one urban, one rural, across the winter of 2016/2017 included phyla Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Acidobacteria, though a multitude of different kinds of organisms were found in both. Taxonomically, Bacteroidetes were more abundant in Golden (urban plain) snow while Proteobacteria were more common in Sunshine (rural mountain) samples. Chemically, Golden snowfall was positively correlated with some metals and anions. The work also hints at better informing the “everything is everywhere” hypotheses of the microbial world and that atmospheric transport of microbiota is not only common, but is capable of disseminating vast amounts of microbiota of different physiologies and genetics that then affect ecosystems globally. Snowfall, we conclude, is a significant repository of microbiological material with strong implications for both ecosystem genetic flux and general bio-aerosol theory.
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spelling doaj.art-d1f1cbabd3694b57bdbbebaee1b3a1f42023-12-03T06:47:54ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-11-016e596110.7717/peerj.5961Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USAAlexander S. HoneymanMaria L. DayJohn R. SpearSnowfall is a global phenomenon highly integrated with hydrology and ecology. Forays into studying bioaerosols and their dependence on aeolian movement are largely constrained to either precipitation-independent analyses or in silico models. Though snowpack and glacial microbiological studies have been conducted, little is known about the biological component of meteoric snow. Through culture-independent phylogenetic and geochemical analyses, we show that the geographical location at which snow precipitates determines snowfall’s geochemical and microbiological composition. Storm-tracking, furthermore, can be used as a valuable environmental indicator to trace down what factors are influencing bioaerosols. We estimate annual aeolian snowfall deposits of up to ∼10 kg of bacterial/archaeal biomass per hectare along our study area of the eastern Front Range in Colorado. The dominant kinds of microbiota captured in an analysis of seven snow events at two different locations, one urban, one rural, across the winter of 2016/2017 included phyla Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Acidobacteria, though a multitude of different kinds of organisms were found in both. Taxonomically, Bacteroidetes were more abundant in Golden (urban plain) snow while Proteobacteria were more common in Sunshine (rural mountain) samples. Chemically, Golden snowfall was positively correlated with some metals and anions. The work also hints at better informing the “everything is everywhere” hypotheses of the microbial world and that atmospheric transport of microbiota is not only common, but is capable of disseminating vast amounts of microbiota of different physiologies and genetics that then affect ecosystems globally. Snowfall, we conclude, is a significant repository of microbiological material with strong implications for both ecosystem genetic flux and general bio-aerosol theory.https://peerj.com/articles/5961.pdfAerosolsAerosol chemistryMicrobial ecologyRemote sensingSnow
spellingShingle Alexander S. Honeyman
Maria L. Day
John R. Spear
Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
PeerJ
Aerosols
Aerosol chemistry
Microbial ecology
Remote sensing
Snow
title Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
title_full Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
title_fullStr Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
title_full_unstemmed Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
title_short Regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm-tracked events, Colorado, USA
title_sort regional fresh snowfall microbiology and chemistry are driven by geography in storm tracked events colorado usa
topic Aerosols
Aerosol chemistry
Microbial ecology
Remote sensing
Snow
url https://peerj.com/articles/5961.pdf
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AT johnrspear regionalfreshsnowfallmicrobiologyandchemistryaredrivenbygeographyinstormtrackedeventscoloradousa