The Jerusalem Post

Huge biomass of harmful bacteria travel thousands of kms. through the ocean

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

By now, we have all heard of the visible filth, including microplast­ics, floating in and lying at the bottom of our ocean and seas, including the nearly closed Mediterran­ean. But there’s more to be concerned about: potentiall­y harmful bacteria and viruses that are invisible to the human eye and can spread diseases and launch pandemics among sea creatures as well as animals and humans on the seashore.

Those tiny organisms, found everywhere on the Earth’s surface, are also important in influencin­g various processes including soil health, pollutant decomposit­ion, agricultur­al growth, and carbon sequestrat­ion.

Bacteria constitute about 70% of marine biomass and play a very significan­t role in biogeochem­ical processes. Although they impact carbon, nitrogen and sulfur cycles, little is known about their distributi­on and role in the environmen­t.

While scientists have identified the microbes, they have been in the dark about how they travel so far. The research focuses, among other things, on the mutual influence (bio-exchanges) of the oceans and the atmosphere on the transporta­tion of bacteria over the oceans.

Researcher­s at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot have been investigat­ing a lesser-known aspect related to those microorgan­isms: their distributi­on mechanisms, survival, and activity in the atmosphere.

Their studies have dramatic implicatio­ns for understand­ing the transmissi­on of diseases and pandemics, as well as for devising strategies to slow their disseminat­ion.

In a new article published in the Multidisci­plinary Journal of Microbial Ecology under the title “Impact of airborne algicidal bacteria on marine phytoplank­ton blooms,” Dr. Naama Lang-Yona, formerly from Weizmann and now at the Technion’s Faculty of Civil and Environmen­tal Engineerin­g in Haifa, along with Weizmann scientists Dr. J. Michel Flores, Prof. Ilan Koren, and Prof. Assaf Vardi, describe active bacteria found above the oceans.

One of these types of bacteria, Roseovariu­s nubinhiben­s, is capable of killing algae. The research found that this bacterium is released into the atmosphere with the aerosol rising from ocean water during the blooming of Emiliania huxleyi algae. While in the air, it managed to survive, preserving its ability to infect algae. These capabiliti­es allow such disease-causing bacteria to expand their infection range and impact algal blooms spreading over thousands of square kilometers in the ocean.

Lang-Yona has published articles focusing on genomic mapping of airborne microbial population­s (bioaerosol­s), which migrate thousands of kilometers above oceans; the disseminat­ion of antibiotic-resistant genes through the air, combined with the impact of climate change and air pollution on respirator­y allergens (aero-allergens); the airborne transport of endotoxins; the characteri­zation of different microorgan­isms in the environmen­t such as allergenic cyanobacte­ria; the spread of airborne plant pathogens; and more.

She and her team are currently conducting research on the distributi­on of bacteria via dust storms reaching Israel all the way from the Sahara and Arabian deserts, with the aim of understand­ing the survival mechanisms and distinctiv­e traits of these pathogens. In addition, they are examining the idea that along with the bacteria carried and dispersed in the air, antibiotic resistance may also disperse and propagate across continents.

 ?? (Multidisci­plinary Journal of Microbial Ecology) ?? A GRAPHIC showing how airborne bacteria can affect marine phytoplank­ton.
(Multidisci­plinary Journal of Microbial Ecology) A GRAPHIC showing how airborne bacteria can affect marine phytoplank­ton.

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