Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Investigation on meteorological dependency of airborne bacterial communities enriched with pathogens over Eastern Himalayas
View through CrossRef
Airborne bacteria have a significant role in structural variation of atmospheric microorganisms with limited knowledge about their composition and geographical distribution, which demands high attention to understand their effect on human health and climate change, as their substantial temporal variation depends on local meteorological conditions. Current study presents composition, diversity, and variability of airborne bacterial loading over the Eastern Himalayas in India. A long-term airborne bacterial sampling is carried out within Bose Institute campus, situated at Darjeeling (27.03°N, 88.26°E, 2200m amsl) from January 2022 to September 2023. Samples are collected for eight hours duration, three times a day at 15m above the ground over sampling site. Illumina NextSeq platform is used to analyze V3-V4 regions of 16S rRNA gene in airborne bacterial samples using bacterium-specific primers. Total 88 samples are being investigated and categorized into four groups according to seasons: winter (temperature = 7±3ºC, relative humidity (RH) = 88±7%), pre-monsoon (15±2ºC, 87±10%), monsoon (17±1ºC, 97±3%), and post-monsoon (13±4ºC, 91±8%). About one-fourth (349 bacterial genera) population of airborne bacterial genera are present throughout the year, implying as background of Eastern Himalayan atmosphere. Human pathogens like Aeromonas, hydrophila, Acinetobacter lwoffii, Staphylococcus aureus, and Staphylococcus epidermis, responsible for gastroenteritis, endocarditis, respiratory, skin, and urinary tract infections are dominating in the atmosphere over Eastern Himalayas. Airborne bacterial loading varies significantly during different seasons with maximum concentration during pre-monsoon (Total cell count = 4.6±2.1 cells.m-3, OTUs = 597±343, Genera = 189±76, Shannon diversity index = 4.1±1.0), followed by post-monsoon (4.2±1.6 cells.m-3, 492±299, 171±65, 4.1±0.5), monsoon (3.8±1.3 cells.m-3, 332±171, 122±58, 3.4±1.0), and winter (3.6±1.7 cells.m-3, 239±87, 105±37, 3.4±0.8). Two distinct groups of beta diversities have been noticed over Eastern Himalayas during pre-monsoon & monsoon and post-monsoon & winter seasons, indicating similar bacterial populations. Eastern Himalayan airborne bacteria exhibit a strong dependency on temperature (r= -0.90, p
Title: Investigation on meteorological dependency of airborne bacterial communities enriched with pathogens over Eastern Himalayas
Description:
Airborne bacteria have a significant role in structural variation of atmospheric microorganisms with limited knowledge about their composition and geographical distribution, which demands high attention to understand their effect on human health and climate change, as their substantial temporal variation depends on local meteorological conditions.
Current study presents composition, diversity, and variability of airborne bacterial loading over the Eastern Himalayas in India.
A long-term airborne bacterial sampling is carried out within Bose Institute campus, situated at Darjeeling (27.
03°N, 88.
26°E, 2200m amsl) from January 2022 to September 2023.
Samples are collected for eight hours duration, three times a day at 15m above the ground over sampling site.
Illumina NextSeq platform is used to analyze V3-V4 regions of 16S rRNA gene in airborne bacterial samples using bacterium-specific primers.
Total 88 samples are being investigated and categorized into four groups according to seasons: winter (temperature = 7±3ºC, relative humidity (RH) = 88±7%), pre-monsoon (15±2ºC, 87±10%), monsoon (17±1ºC, 97±3%), and post-monsoon (13±4ºC, 91±8%).
About one-fourth (349 bacterial genera) population of airborne bacterial genera are present throughout the year, implying as background of Eastern Himalayan atmosphere.
Human pathogens like Aeromonas, hydrophila, Acinetobacter lwoffii, Staphylococcus aureus, and Staphylococcus epidermis, responsible for gastroenteritis, endocarditis, respiratory, skin, and urinary tract infections are dominating in the atmosphere over Eastern Himalayas.
Airborne bacterial loading varies significantly during different seasons with maximum concentration during pre-monsoon (Total cell count = 4.
6±2.
1 cells.
m-3, OTUs = 597±343, Genera = 189±76, Shannon diversity index = 4.
1±1.
0), followed by post-monsoon (4.
2±1.
6 cells.
m-3, 492±299, 171±65, 4.
1±0.
5), monsoon (3.
8±1.
3 cells.
m-3, 332±171, 122±58, 3.
4±1.
0), and winter (3.
6±1.
7 cells.
m-3, 239±87, 105±37, 3.
4±0.
8).
Two distinct groups of beta diversities have been noticed over Eastern Himalayas during pre-monsoon & monsoon and post-monsoon & winter seasons, indicating similar bacterial populations.
Eastern Himalayan airborne bacteria exhibit a strong dependency on temperature (r= -0.
90, p.
Related Results
Burden of the Beast
Burden of the Beast
Introduction
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and its fluctuating waves of infections and the emergence of new variants, Indigenous populations in Australia and worldwide have re...
Evolution of Antimicrobial Resistance in Community vs. Hospital-Acquired Infections
Evolution of Antimicrobial Resistance in Community vs. Hospital-Acquired Infections
Abstract
Introduction
Hospitals are high-risk environments for infections. Despite the global recognition of these pathogens, few studies compare microorganisms from community-acqu...
Study on long-range transport of dust-associated airborne bacteria over Eastern Himalayas in India
Study on long-range transport of dust-associated airborne bacteria over Eastern Himalayas in India
Transboundary movement of atmospheric microorganisms through dust transportation plays a pivotal role in influencing human health, agricultural productivity, and climate dynamics b...
GEOSPATIAL ASPECTS OF FINANCIAL CAPACITY OF TERRITORIAL COMMUNITIES OF TERNOPIL REGION
GEOSPATIAL ASPECTS OF FINANCIAL CAPACITY OF TERRITORIAL COMMUNITIES OF TERNOPIL REGION
In the article geospatial aspects of the financial capacity of territorial communities of Ternopil region are described. The need to conduct such a study has been updated, since no...
VLP-Based Model for Study of Airborne Viral Pathogens
VLP-Based Model for Study of Airborne Viral Pathogens
Abstract
The recent COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the danger of airborne viral pathogens. The lack of model systems to study airborne pathogens limits the under...
Particle Based Model for Airborne Disease Transmission
Particle Based Model for Airborne Disease Transmission
Executive Summary
Prior literature documents cases of airborne infectious disease transmission at distances ranging from ≥ 2 m to inter-continental in scale. Physic...
Attia-1 and Attia-2 New Archimedean Bivariate Copulas Modeling Positive Dependency
Attia-1 and Attia-2 New Archimedean Bivariate Copulas Modeling Positive Dependency
In this paper, the author introduces new methods to construct Archimedean copulas. The generator of each copula fulfills the sufficient conditions as regards the boundary and being...
Environmental microbiology and public health: Advanced strategies for mitigating waterborne and airborne pathogens to prevent disease
Environmental microbiology and public health: Advanced strategies for mitigating waterborne and airborne pathogens to prevent disease
Environmental microbiology is integral to understanding and controlling pathogens that affect public health. This paper discusses advanced strategies to mitigate waterborne and air...

