Aerosols of biological origin play a vital role in the Earth system, particularly in the interactions between atmosphere, biosphere, climate, and public health. Airborne bacteria, fungal spores, pollen, and other bioparticles are essential for the reproduction and spread of organisms across various ecosystems, and they can cause or enhance human, animal, and plant diseases. Moreover, they can serve as nuclei for cloud droplets, ice crystals, and precipitation, thus influencing the hydrological cycle and climate. The sources, abundance, composition, and effects of biological aerosols and the atmospheric microbiome are, however, not yet well characterized and constitute a large gap in the scientific understanding of the interaction and co-evolution of life and climate in the Earth system. This review presents an overview of the state of bioaerosol research, highlights recent advances, and outlines future perspectives in terms of bioaerosol identification, characterization, transport, and transformation processes, as well as their interactions with climate, health, and ecosystems, focusing on the role bioaerosols play in the Earth system. (C) 2016 The Authors and Battelle Memorial Institute. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Journal article
Bioaerosols in the Earth system: Climate, health, and ecosystem interactions
Atmospheric Research, Vol.182, pp.346-376
15/Dec/2016
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0, Open Access
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Bioaerosols in the Earth system; Climate, health, and ecosystem interactions
- Creators
- Janine Froehlich-Nowoisky (Corresponding Author) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryChristopher J. Kampf (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryBettina Weber (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryJ. Alex Huffman (null) - University of Colorado DenverChristopher Poehlker (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryMeinrat O. Andreae (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryNaama Lang-Yona (null) - 972WIS_INST___99Susannah M. Burrows (null) - Pacific Northwest National LaboratorySachin S. Gunthe (null) - Indian Institute of Technology MadrasWolfgang Elbert (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryHang Su (null) - Max Planck Institute for ChemistryPeter Hoor (null) - Johannes Gutenberg University MainzEckhard Thines (null) - Johannes Gutenberg University MainzThorsten Hoffmann (null) - Johannes Gutenberg University MainzViviane R. Despres (null) - Johannes Gutenberg University MainzUlrich Poeschl (null) - Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
- Resource Type
- Journal article; Review
- Publication Details
- Atmospheric Research, Vol.182, pp.346-376; 15/Dec/2016
- Number of pages
- 31
- Language
- English
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosres.2016.07.018
- Grant note
- The authors gratefully acknowledge stimulating scientific exchange and discussions with numerous members of the scientific community, in particular with the colleagues involved in the referenced studies, on which this review and perspective article is building, and with members of the Mainz Bioaerosol Laboratory (MBAL). J.F.-N., U.P., and C.J.K acknowledge support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG FR3641/1-2, FOR 1525 INUIT and KA 4008/1-1, respectively) and B.W. and S.S.G. acknowledge support from the Max Planck Society (Nobel Laureate Fellowship and MPG Partner Group, respectively). N.L.-Y. acknowledges support from the Max Planck Society and from the Weizmann Institute of Science - National Postdoctoral Award Program for Advancing Women in Science. J.A.H. acknowledges internal support from the University of Denver. S.M.B. acknowledges support fromthe U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science Biological and Environmental Research Program.
- Record Identifier
- 993267487603596
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