We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Ski Tourism Shapes the Snow Microbiome on Ski Slopes in the Italian Central Alps
Summary
Researchers tracked seasonal changes in the snow microbiome at ski slopes in the Italian Alps and found that ski tourism significantly increased microbial loads on impacted slopes. The ski track snow contained elevated levels of host-associated bacteria likely introduced through artificial snow made from river water, along with microorganisms capable of degrading xenobiotics like microplastics and ski wax. The findings highlight how winter sports activities can alter microbial ecosystems in alpine environments.
Winter sports exert significant anthropogenic pressures on the snow microbiome, affecting the entire alpine ecosystem. The massive usage of artificial snow, human occupation, and the release of xenobiotics like microplastics or ski wax components on ski tracks can profoundly alter snow microbial ecology. Here, we reconstructed the temporal dynamics of the snow microbiome at three sites in the Italian Alps: inside and outside a ski track at the impacted site of Santa Caterina Valfurva and near Cancano lake as an unimpacted control. Using epifluorescence microscopy, 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, and inferred metagenomics, we found that the snow microbiome inside the track presented a higher load of prokaryotes and viruses. Notably, N<sub>2</sub>-fixing microorganisms from cryospheric environments and host-associated taxa, like Terrisporobacter, Clostridium sensu stricto, Enterococcus, and Muribaculaceae, and the opportunistic pathogen Citrobacter characterised the impacted site. These microorganisms could originate from the river water used to produce artificial snow during winter. Our findings highlight the complexity and multifunctionality of the snow microbiome, where microorganisms with different ecological propensities can coexist, and the detectable impact of ski tourism, which enriches host-associated and xenobiotic-degrading microorganisms. This underscores the need for systematic monitoring and protection of the snow microbiome in the Alpine environment from anthropogenic threats.
Sign in to start a discussion.