04/07/2018 / By Ralph Flores
A study published in the ISME Journal revealed that aerosol dispersal of soil and dust particles contribute to the long-term transport of bacteria and viruses. This could very well explain the number of cases of viruses with very similar genetic makeup despite being identified in distant environments, according to researchers.
While researchers established that long-distance transport of virus and bacteria occurs, there are still certain areas that need closer examination – in particular, the mechanisms that impact deposition rates.
Journal Reference:
Reche I, D’Orta G, Mladenov N, Winget DM, Suttle CA. DEPOSITION RATES OF VIRUSES AND BACTERIA ABOVE THE ATMOSPHERIC BOUNDARY LAYER. ISME Journal. 2018. DOI: 10.1038/s41396-017-0042-4
Tagged Under: aerosol dispersal, atmosphere, Atmospheric transport, bacteria, bacterial infection, deposition rate, deposition rates, displacement, downward flux, dust particles, genetic makeup, viral infection, virus