Aerobiology: a new research area.

Authors

  • Jesús Loera Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales, Agrícolas y Pecuarias, Mexico
  • Scott A. Isard University of Illinois
  • Michael E. Irwip University of Illinois
  • Stuart Gage Michigan State University
  • Peter Lingren United States Department of Agriculture
  • Jimmy Raulston United States Department of Agriculture

Abstract

A workshop to address the science of aerobiology was held at Michigan State University‘s Kellog Biological Station on October 10-13, 1992. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together scientistis and to our-reach specialists from diverse disciplines to advance the understanding of aerobiology and improve the capability to predict the atmospheric movement of biota. Biota important to agriculture, forestry, human health and the envirommental move in predictable atmospheric transport events. The workshop participants discussed the principles of long-distance atmospheric transport of biota, formulated strategies to share diagnostic technologies and information systems, and concluded that science is positioned to make major advances in forecasting the movement of arthropods, plant viruses, fungi, and bacteria; birds and human allergens. A North American alliance for aerobiology research is being accelerate research advances in the important area of science. Approximately 70 nationally and internationally recognized scientists from agriculture, medicine, engineering, physics, eviromental science, and systems science participated in the workshop. The workshop generated (1) a set of generic foci and scientific hypotheses that will serve as guidelines to conceptualize and direct research in aerobiology, (2) recommendations for networking biological, atmospheric, and other environmental monitoring networks for in forecasting aerobiological transport events, (3) recommendations for utilizing existing electronic networks to link scientistis with agencies and institutions with and tools, (4) recommendations for developing an information database on an electronic comunications network to facilitate access to aerobioogical information, and (5) the establishment of an organizational, structure for the Alliance for Aerobiological Research (AFAR)with a governing board to serve the membership.

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References

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MACKENZIE, D.R.; BARFIELD, C.S.; KENNEDY, G.G.; BERGER, R.D. and TARANTO, D.J. (eds.). 1985. The movement and dispersal of Agriculturally Important Biotic Agents. Claitor, Baton Rouge.

PEDGLEY, D.E. 1982. Windborne Pests and Diseases Meteorology of Airborn Organism. Ellis Horwood, Chichester.

RAINEY, R.C. 1989. Migration and Meterology: Flight Behaviour and the Atmospheric Environmental of Locusts and other Migrant Pests. Clarendon, Oxford.

Published

1994-01-01

How to Cite

Loera, J., Isard, S. A., Irwip, M. E., Gage, S., Lingren, P., & Raulston, J. (1994). Aerobiology: a new research area. Agronomía Mesoamericana, 5, 159–163. Retrieved from https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/agromeso/article/view/60511