Authors
Robert M Bowers, Christian L Lauber, Christine Wiedinmyer, Micah Hamady, Anna G Hallar, Ray Fall, Rob Knight, Noah Fierer
Publication date
2009/8/1
Journal
Applied and environmental microbiology
Volume
75
Issue
15
Pages
5121-5130
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
Bacteria and fungi are ubiquitous in the atmosphere. The diversity and abundance of airborne microbes may be strongly influenced by atmospheric conditions or even influence atmospheric conditions themselves by acting as ice nucleators. However, few comprehensive studies have described the diversity and dynamics of airborne bacteria and fungi based on culture-independent techniques. We document atmospheric microbial abundance, community composition, and ice nucleation at a high-elevation site in northwestern Colorado. We used a standard small-subunit rRNA gene Sanger sequencing approach for total microbial community analysis and a bacteria-specific 16S rRNA bar-coded pyrosequencing approach (4,864 sequences total). During the 2-week collection period, total microbial abundances were relatively constant, ranging from 9.6 × 105 to 6.6 × 106 cells m−3 of air, and the diversity and …
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