AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants and their associated bacteria are essential for the functioning of constructed wetlands, serving roles in pollution management.
  • The study examined how varying levels of metal and emerging pollutants, along with bioaugmentation using native bacterial strains, influenced the microbial communities within plant roots.
  • Findings revealed that higher pollution levels reduced microbial diversity in roots, with specific microbial families showing increased abundance in both high and low pollution conditions, emphasizing the importance of understanding plant microbiomes for enhancing phytoremediation effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Plants and their associated bacteria play a crucial role in constructed wetlands. In this study, the impact of different levels of pollution and bioaugmentation with indigenous strains individually or in consortia was investigated on the composition of the endophytic microbial communities of . Five treatments were examined and compared in where the wetland plant was exposed to increasing levels of metal pollution (Zn, Ni, Cd) and emerging pollutants (BPA, SMX, CIP), enriched with different combinations of single or mixed endophytic strains. High levels of mixed pollution had a negative effect on alpha diversity indices of the root communities; moreover, the diversity indices were negatively correlated with the increasing metal concentrations. It was demonstrated that the root communities were separated depending on the level of mixed pollution, while the family exhibited the higher relative abundance within the root endophytic communities from high and low polluted treatments. This study highlights the effects of pollution and inoculation on phytoremediation efficiency based on a better understanding of the plant microbiome community composition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200866PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.01526DOI Listing

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