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Viability and potential for immigration of airborne bacteria from Africa that reach high mountain lakes in Europe
Authors:Anna Hervàs  Lluís Camarero  Isabel Reche  Emilio O Casamayor
Institution:Limnological Observatory of the Pyreenes-Department of Continental Ecology, Centre d'Estudis Avançats de Blanes, CEAB-CSIC, Accés Cala Sant Francesc, 14, 17300 Blanes, Girona, Spain.;
Departamento de Ecología-Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain.
Abstract:We have analysed the diversity of the bacteria, which grow after addition of concentrated airborne particles and desert dust in different microcosms combinations with water samples from oligotrophic alpine lakes. We used, on the one hand, airborne bacteria transported by an African dust plume and collected in a high mountain area in the central Pyrenees (Spain). On the other hand, we collected desert dust in Mauritania ( c . 3000 km distance, and a few days estimated airborne journey), a known source region for dust storms in West Africa, which originates many of the dust plumes landing on Europe. In all the dust-amended treatments we consistently observed bacterial growth of common phyla usually found in freshwater ecosystems, i.e. Alpha -, Beta - and Gammaproteobacteria , Actinobacteria , and a few Bacteroidetes , but with different composition based on lake water pretreatment and dust type. Overall, we tentatively split the bacterial community in (i) typical freshwater non-airborne bacteria, (ii) cosmopolitan long-distance airborne bacteria, (iii) non-freshwater low-distance airborne bacteria, (iv) non-freshwater long-distance airborne soil bacteria and (v) freshwater non-soil airborne bacteria. We identified viable long-distance airborne bacteria as immigrants in alpine lakes (e.g. Sphingomonas -like) but also viable putative airborne pathogens with the potential to grow in remote alpine areas ( Acinetobacter -like and Arthrobacter -like). Generation of atmospheric aerosols and remote dust deposition is a global process, largely enhanced by perturbations linked to the global change, and high mountain lakes are very convenient worldwide model systems for monitoring global-scale bacterial dispersion and pathogens entries in remote pristine environments.
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