Issue 2, 2004

Viable fungi and bacteria in personal exposure samples in relation to microenvironments

Abstract

Personal exposures to viable fungi and bacteria were compared with the concentrations being assessed by stationary samplers in home and workplace microenvironments. A random sample of 81 elementary school teachers in eastern Finland performed two 24-hour measurement periods in wintertime. Concentrations and prevalences of viable fungi and bacteria on the collection filters were determined by cultivation method. The geometric mean concentration was 3–12 cfu m−3 for total viable fungi, 0.6–3.7 cfu m−3 for Penicillium and mainly under 1 cfu m−3 for other fungi. The samples with higher fungal concentrations also had higher diversity of fungi than samples with lower concentrations. The total number of fungal genera recovered was 39 for personal, 34 for home and 23 for work samples. The variation in concentration of Penicillium explained even 25–95% of the variations of total fungal concentration in personal exposure, home and workplace environments. There was an association between personal exposure and home concentration of viable fungi and between personal exposure and home and work concentrations of viable bacteria. Personal exposure and home concentrations of fungi were higher in rural areas than in urban areas. Our results also indicate that presence of a certain fungus in a microenvironment does not necessarily mean similar findings in personal exposure samples.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Aug 2003
Accepted
21 Nov 2003
First published
06 Jan 2004

J. Environ. Monit., 2004,6, 113-120

Viable fungi and bacteria in personal exposure samples in relation to microenvironments

M. Toivola, S. Alm and A. Nevalainen, J. Environ. Monit., 2004, 6, 113 DOI: 10.1039/B309960A

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