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Dissecting giant hailstones: A glimpse into the troposphere with its diverse bacterial communities and fibrous microplastics
Summary
Researchers dissected giant hailstones and discovered diverse bacterial communities and fibrous microplastics within their layered structure, suggesting that both biological and anthropogenic particles play a role in the nucleation and growth of these unusually large atmospheric ice formations.
The formation of giant hailstones is a rare weather event that has devastating consequences in inhabited areas. This hazard has been occurring more frequently and with greater size of hailstones in recent years, and thus needs to be better understood. While the generally accepted mechanism is thought to be a process similar to the formation of smaller hailstones but with exceptional duration and stronger updrafts, recent evidence suggests that biotic and abiotic factors also influence the growth of these unusually large ice chunks. In this study, we improved these findings by determining the distribution of a wide variety of these factors throughout the hail volume and expanding the search to include new particles that are common in the environment and are of anthropogenic origin. We melted the concentric layers of several giant hailstones that fell to the ground over a small region in Slovenia in 2019. The samples, up to 13 cm in diameter, were analyzed for biotic and abiotic constituents that could have influenced their formation. Using 16S rRNA-based metagenomics approaches, we identified a highly diverse bacterial community, and by using scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy, we found natural and synthetic fibers concentrated in the cores of the giant hailstones. For the first time, we were able to detect the existence of microplastic fibers in giant hailstones and determine the changes in the distribution of sand within the volume of the samples. Our results suggest that changes in the composition of hail layers and their great diversity are important factors that should be considered in research. It also appears that anthropogenic microfiber pollutants were a significant factor in the formation of the giant hailstones analyzed in this study.
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