Qualitative and quantitative comparison of pollen calendars for plain and mountain areas
- 1 July 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Experimental Allergy
- Vol. 6 (4) , 383-393
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2222.1976.tb01920.x
Abstract
Summary: A comparison of the quantity and the quality of pollen content in the atmosphere of two regions, one of the plains bordering the Mediterranean sea (altitude 40 m), the other of the mountains of the Pyrenees (altitude 1550 m), was made during the climatological year 1974–1975.The method which was used intercepts the pollen flux of the atmosphere with a vertical filtering unit, which is exposed facing the direction of wind on the filtering door of the weather‐vane and collects much larger quantities of pollen than the other techniques of collection.The atmospheric currents displace from one region to another numerous spores and pollens, the trajectories of which are directly influenced by the general circulation of the atmosphere.The density of these fluxes can be very large, reaching 2500 grains/m3 of air at M.T.P.R. in the last week of January; the taxons collected are very numerous (more than 700).The atmospheric transfer of pollen modifies largely the pollen content of the atmosphere of different flowering domains. These interferences manifest themselves in the simplest cases by the presence of two peaks of concentration, the principal corresponding to the local efflorescence, the second to the pollen transferred from other regions. The pollen concentrations in the mountains are one‐third of those in the plains.Pollination in the mountains is several weeks late in comparison to the plain during the first semester, whereas during the second semester, it is the plains that show a certain delay.These findings show why some allergic patients who go to the mountains during summer are affected twice by pollination.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calendrier pollinique de Montpellier réalisé par une méthode quantitative et sur ordinateurRevue Française d'Allergologie et d'Immunologie Clinique, 1975
- Mesoscale Transport and Dispersion of Airborne PollensJournal of Applied Meteorology, 1974
- Le calendrier pollinique de la station d'Hauteville confrontations avec celui de Lyon (1966–1967–1968)Revue Francaise D'allergologie, 1970
- AN AUTOMATIC VOLUMETRIC SPORE TRAPAnnals of Applied Biology, 1952
- The volumetric incidence of atmospheric allergens: II. Simultaneous measurements by volumeric and gravity slide methods. Results with ragweed pollen and alternaria sporesJournal of Allergy, 1944