Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • canada (3)
  • dna plant (2)
  • hybrid (1)
  • juniperus (5)
  • london (2)
  • oklahoma (4)
  • ontario (3)
  • pollen (11)
  • texas (4)
  • transport (4)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Although considered rare, airborne pollen can be deposited far from its place of origin under a confluence of favorable conditions. Temporally anomalous records of Cupressacean pollen collected from January air samples in London, Ontario, Canada have been cited as a new case of long-distance transport. Data on pollination season implicated Juniperus ashei (mountain cedar), with populations in central Texas and south central Oklahoma, as the nearest source of the Cupressacean pollen in the Canadian air samples. This finding is of special significance given the allergenicity of mountain cedar pollen. While microscopy is used extensively to identify particles in the air spora, pollen from all members of the Cupressaceae, including Juniperus, are morphologically indistinguishable. Consequently, we implemented a molecular approach to characterize Juniperus pollen using PCR in order to test the long-distance transport hypothesis. Our PCR results using species-specific primers confirmed that the anomalous Cupressacean pollen collected in Canada was from J. ashei. Forward trajectory analysis from source areas in Texas and the Arbuckle Mountains in Oklahoma and backward trajectory analysis from the destination area near London, Ontario were completed using models implemented in HYSPLIT4 (Hybrid Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory). Results from these trajectory analyses strongly supported the conclusion that the J. ashei pollen detected in Canada had its origins in Texas or Oklahoma. The results from the molecular findings are significant as they provide a new method to confirm the long-distance transport of pollen that bears allergenic importance.

    Citation

    Rashmi Prava Mohanty, Mark Alan Buchheim, James Anderson, Estelle Levetin. Molecular analysis confirms the long-distance transport of Juniperus ashei pollen. PloS one. 2017;12(3):e0173465

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 28273170

    View Full Text