Estimating the abundance of airborne pollen and fungal spores at variable elevations using an aircraft: how high can they fly?

被引:0
|
作者
Athanasios Damialis
Evangelos Kaimakamis
Maria Konoglou
Ioannis Akritidis
Claudia Traidl-Hoffmann
Dimitrios Gioulekas
机构
[1] Chair and Institute of Environmental Medicine,Department of Ecology
[2] UNIKA-T,1st Pulmonary Department
[3] Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Zentrum München,Internal Medicine Department
[4] Germany - German Research Center for Environmental Health,Pulmonary Department
[5] CK-CARE,undefined
[6] Christine Kühne – Center for Allergy and Research and Education,undefined
[7] School of Biology,undefined
[8] Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,undefined
[9] “G. Papanikolaou” General Hospital of Thessaloniki,undefined
[10] “G. Gennimatas” General Hospital of Thessaloniki,undefined
[11] Faculty of Medicine,undefined
[12] Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Airborne pollen and fungal spores are monitored mainly in highly populated, urban environments, for allergy prevention purposes. However, their sources can frequently be located outside cities’ fringes with more vegetation. So as to shed light to this paradox, we investigated the diversity and abundance of airborne pollen and fungal spores at various environmental regimes. We monitored pollen and spores using an aircraft and a car, at elevations from sea level to 2,000 m above ground, in the region of Thesssaloniki, Greece. We found a total of 24 pollen types and more than 15 spore types. Pollen and spores were detected throughout the elevational transect. Lower elevations exhibited higher pollen concentrations in only half of plant taxa and higher fungal spore concentrations in only Ustilago. Pinaceae and Quercus pollen were the most abundant recorded by airplane (>54% of the total). Poaceae pollen were the most abundant via car measurements (>77% of the total). Cladosporium and Alternaria spores were the most abundant in all cases (aircraft: >69% and >17%, car: >45% and >27%, respectively). We conclude that pollen and fungal spores can be diverse and abundant even outside the main source area, evidently because of long-distance transport incidents.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 3 条
  • [1] Estimating the abundance of airborne pollen and fungal spores at variable elevations using an aircraft: how high can they fly?
    Damialis, Athanasios
    Kaimakamis, Evangelos
    Konoglou, Maria
    Akritidis, Ioannis
    Traidl-Hoffmann, Claudia
    Gioulekas, Dimitrios
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [2] Counting airborne pollen at various elevations using an aircraft: how high can aeroallergens fly?
    Kaimakamis, E.
    Damialis, A.
    Konoglou, M.
    Akritidis, J.
    Gioulekas, D.
    ALLERGY, 2012, 67 : 250 - 250
  • [3] Estimating Lung Deposition of Fungal Spores Using Actual Airborne Spore Concentrations and Physiological Data
    Secondo, Lynn E.
    Sagona, Jessica A.
    Calderon, Leonardo
    Wang, Zuocheng
    Plotnik, Deborah
    Senick, Jennifer
    Sorensen-Allacci, Maryann
    Wener, Richard
    Andrews, Clinton J.
    Mainelis, Gediminas
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2021, 55 (03) : 1852 - 1863