Distinct responses of airborne abundant and rare microbial communities to atmospheric changes associated with Chinese New Year

Author:

Li Hu12ORCID,Hong You‐Wei123,Gao Meng‐Ke14,An Xin‐Li12,Yang Xiao‐Ru12,Zhu Yong‐Guan125,Chen Jin‐Sheng123,Su Jian‐Qiang12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Urban Environment and Health, Fujian Key Laboratory of Watershed Ecology, Institute of Urban Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Xiamen China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

3. CAS Center for Excellence in Regional Atmospheric Environment, Institute of Urban Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Xiamen China

4. College of Resource and Environmental Science Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University Fuzhou China

5. State Key Lab of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco‐environmental Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAirborne microorganisms, including pathogens, would change with surrounding environments and become issues of global concern due to their threats to human health. Microbial communities typically contain a few abundant but many rare species. However, how the airborne abundant and rare microbial communities respond to environmental changes is still unclear, especially at hour scale. Here, we used a sequencing approach based on bacterial 16S rRNA genes and fungal ITS2 regions to investigate the high time‐resolved dynamics of airborne bacteria and fungi and to explore the responses of abundant and rare microbes to the atmospheric changes. Our results showed that air pollutants and microbial communities were significantly affected by human activities related to the Chinese New Year (CNY). Before CNY, significant hour‐scale changes in both abundant and rare subcommunities were observed, while only abundant bacterial subcommunity changed with hour time series during CNY. Air pollutants and meteorological parameters explained 61.5%−74.2% variations of abundant community but only 13.3%−21.6% variations of rare communities. These results suggested that abundant species were more sensitive to environmental changes than rare taxa. Stochastic processes predominated in the assembly of abundant communities, but deterministic processes determined the assembly of rare communities. Potential bacterial pathogens during CNY were the highest, suggesting an increased health risk of airborne microbes during CNY. Overall, our findings highlighted the “holiday effect” of CNY on airborne microbes and expanded the current understanding of the ecological mechanisms and health risks of microbes in a changing atmosphere.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Microbiology,Biotechnology

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