Higher Technical School of Industrial Engineering, Technical University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Departament of Plant Biology II, Faculty of Pharmacy, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Int Microbiol. 2016 Mar;19(1):1-13. doi: 10.2436/20.1501.01.258.
The first part of this review ("Monitoring of airborne biological particles in outdoor atmosphere. Part 1: Importance, variability and ratios") describes the current knowledge on the major biological particles present in the air regarding their global distribution, concentrations, ratios and influence of meteorological factors in an attempt to provide a framework for monitoring their biodiversity and variability in such a singular environment as the atmosphere. Viruses, bacteria, fungi, pollen and fragments thereof are the most abundant microscopic biological particles in the air outdoors. Some of them can cause allergy and severe diseases in humans, other animals and plants, with the subsequent economic impact. Despite the harsh conditions, they can be found from land and sea surfaces to beyond the troposphere and have been proposed to play a role also in weather conditions and climate change by acting as nucleation particles and inducing water vapour condensation. In regards to their global distribution, marine environments act mostly as a source for bacteria while continents additionally provide fungal and pollen elements. Within terrestrial environments, their abundances and diversity seem to be influenced by the land-use type (rural, urban, coastal) and their particularities. Temporal variability has been observed for all these organisms, mostly triggered by global changes in temperature, relative humidity, et cetera. Local fluctuations in meteorological factors may also result in pronounced changes in the airbiota. Although biological particles can be transported several hundreds of meters from the original source, and even intercontinentally, the time and final distance travelled are strongly influenced by factors such as wind speed and direction. [Int Microbiol 2016; 19(1):1-1 3].
这篇综述的第一部分(“户外大气中空气传播生物颗粒的监测。第 1 部分:重要性、可变性和比率”)描述了目前关于空气中主要生物颗粒的知识,包括它们在全球的分布、浓度、比率以及气象因素的影响,旨在为监测其在大气这一独特环境中的生物多样性和可变性提供框架。病毒、细菌、真菌、花粉及其碎片是户外空气中最丰富的微观生物颗粒。其中一些会引起人类、其他动物和植物的过敏和严重疾病,造成严重的经济影响。尽管条件恶劣,它们仍然可以在从陆地和海洋表面到平流层以上的范围内被发现,并被提议通过充当成核粒子和诱导水蒸气凝结,在天气条件和气候变化中发挥作用。就其全球分布而言,海洋环境主要是细菌的来源,而大陆则额外提供真菌和花粉元素。在陆地环境中,它们的丰度和多样性似乎受到土地利用类型(农村、城市、沿海)及其特殊性的影响。所有这些生物都观察到了时间上的可变性,主要是由温度、相对湿度等全球性变化引起的。气象因素的局部波动也可能导致空气生物群发生明显变化。尽管生物颗粒可以从原始源传输数百米,甚至跨洲,但时间和最终行进距离受到风速和风向等因素的强烈影响。[Int Microbiol 2016; 19(1):1-13]。