Indoor airborne bacterial communities are influenced by ventilation, occupancy, and outdoor air source

James Meadow(In-Q-Tel), Adam Altrichter(University of Oregon), Steven W. Kembel(Université du Québec à Montréal), Jeff Kline(University of Oregon), Gwynne Mhuireach(University of Oregon), Maxwell Moriyama(University of Oregon), Dale Northcutt(University of Oregon), Timothy K. O’Connor(University of Arizona), A. M. Womack(University of Oregon), G. Z. Brown(University of Oregon), Jessica Green(Santa Fe Institute), Brendan J. M. Bohannan(University of Oregon)
Indoor Air
April 29, 2013
Cited by 421Open Access
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Abstract

Architects and engineers are beginning to consider a new dimension of indoor air: the structure and composition of airborne microbial communities. A first step in this emerging field is to understand the forces that shape the diversity of bioaerosols across space and time within the built environment. In an effort to elucidate the relative influences of three likely drivers of indoor bioaerosol diversity - variation in outdoor bioaerosols, ventilation strategy, and occupancy load - we conducted an intensive temporal study of indoor airborne bacterial communities in a high-traffic university building with a hybrid HVAC (mechanically and naturally ventilated) system. Indoor air communities closely tracked outdoor air communities, but human-associated bacterial genera were more than twice as abundant in indoor air compared with outdoor air. Ventilation had a demonstrated effect on indoor airborne bacterial community composition; changes in outdoor air communities were detected inside following a time lag associated with differing ventilation strategies relevant to modern building design. Our results indicate that both occupancy patterns and ventilation strategies are important for understanding airborne microbial community dynamics in the built environment.


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