Short-range contributions of local sources to ambient air

Author:

Gusareva Elena S12ORCID,Gaultier Nicolas E1ORCID,Uchida Akira1,Premkrishnan Balakrishnan N V1,Heinle Cassie E1,Phung Wen J1,Wong Anthony1,Lau Kenny J X1,Yap Zhei H1ORCID,Koh Yanqing1,Ang Poh N1,Putra Alexander1,Panicker Deepa1,Lee Jessica G H3,Neves Luis C4,Drautz-Moses Daniela I1,Schuster Stephan C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Singapore Center for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering (SCELSE), Nanyang Technological University , 60 Nanyang Drive, Singapore 637551 , Singapore

2. The Asian School of the Environment, Nanyang Technological University , 62 Nanyang Drive, Singapore 637459 , Singapore

3. Mandai Nature , 80 Mandai Lake Rd, Singapore 729826 , Singapore

4. Animal Care Department, Mandai Wildlife Group , 80 Mandai Lake Rd, Singapore 729826 , Singapore

Abstract

Abstract Recent developments in aerobiology have enabled the investigation of airborne biomass with high temporal and taxonomic resolution. In this study, we assess the contributions of local sources to ambient air within a 160,000 m2 tropical avian park (AP). We sequenced and analyzed 120 air samples from seven locations situated 160 to 400 m apart, representing distinct microhabitats. Each microhabitat contained a characteristic air microbiome, defined by the abundance and richness of its airborne microbial community members, supported by both, PCoA and Random Forest analysis. Each outdoor microhabitat contained 1% to 18.6% location-specific taxa, while a core microbiome of 27.1% of the total taxa was shared. To identify and assess local sources, we compared the AP dataset with a DVE reference dataset from a location 2 km away, collected during a year-round sampling campaign. Intersection of data from the two sites demonstrated 61.6% of airborne species originated from local sources of the AP, 34.5% from ambient air background, and only 3.9% of species were specific to the DVE reference site. In-depth taxonomic analysis demonstrated association of bacteria-dominated air microbiomes with indoor spaces, while fungi-dominated airborne microbial biomass was predominant in outdoor settings with ample vegetation. The approach presented here demonstrates an ability to identify local source contributions against an ambient air background, despite the prevailing mixing of air masses caused by atmospheric turbulences.

Funder

Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 3

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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