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Título
Environmental drivers of the seasonal exposure to airborne Alternaria spores in Spain
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Aerobiology
Fungal spores
Allergy
Seasonality
Weather conditions
Clasificación UNESCO
2416.03 Palinología
2417 Biología Vegetal (Botánica)
Fecha de publicación
2022
Citación
Picornell, A., Rojo, J., Trigo, M. M., Ruiz-Mata, R., Lara, B., Romero-Morte, J., ... & Recio, M. (2022). Environmental drivers of the seasonal exposure to airborne Alternaria spores in Spain. Science of the Total Environment, 823, 153596.
Resumen
[EN]Alternaria conidia have high allergenic potential and they can trigger important respiratory diseases. Due to that and to
their extensive detection period, airborne Alternaria spores are considered as a relevant airborne allergenic particle.
Several studies have been developed in order to predict the human exposure to this aeroallergen and to prevent
their negative effects on sensitive population. These studies revealed that some sampling locations usually have just
one single Alternaria spore season while other locations generally have two seasons within the same year. However,
the reasons of these two different seasonal patterns remain unclear. To understand them better, the present study
was carried out in order to determine if there are any weather conditions that influence these different behaviours
at different sampling locations. With this purpose, the airborne Alternaria spore concentrations of 18 sampling locations
in a wide range of latitudinal, altitudinal and climate ranges of Spain were studied. The aerobiological samples
were obtained by means of Hirst-Type volumetric pollen traps, and the seasonality of the airborne Alternaria spores
were analysed. The optimal weather conditions for spore production were studied, and the main weather factor affecting
Alternaria spore seasonality were analysed by means of random forests and regression trees. The results showed
that the temperature was the most relevant variable for the Alternaria spore dispersion and it influenced both the
spore integrals and their seasonality. The water availability was also a very significant variable.Warmer sampling locations
generally have a longer period of Alternaria spore detection. However, the spore production declines during the
summer when the temperatures are extremelywarm, what splits the favourable period for Alternaria spore production
and dispersion into two separate ones, detected as two Alternaria spore seasons within the same year.
URI
ISSN
0048-9697
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153596
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