AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how soil microorganisms respond to soils contaminated with both heavy metals and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH), revealing shifts in microbial communities under different types of pollution.
  • Heavy metal-TPH co-contaminated soils showed reduced microbial diversity, with significant increases in specific microbial groups like Proteobacteria in one sample (HT1) and Firmicutes in another (HT2), indicating different responses to varying pollutant compositions.
  • The research identifies potential bioremediation bacteria that could help clean up pollution, such as Streptococcus and Acinetobacter for heavy metals, and Syntrophaceae for TPH, providing new insights for future environmental cleanup efforts.

Article Abstract

Due to the accumulation of heavy metals in soil ecosystems, the response of soil microorganisms to the disturbance of heavy metals were widely studied. However, little was known about the interactions among microorganisms in heavy metals and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) co-contaminated soils. In the present study, the microbiota shifts of 2 different contamination types of heavy metal-TPH polluted soils were investigated. NGS sequencing approach was adopted to illustrate the microbial community structure and to predict community function. Networks were established to reveal the interactions between microbes and environmental pollutants. Results showed that the alpha diversity and OTUs number of soil microbiota were reduced under heavy metals and TPH pollutants. TPH was the major pollutant in HT1 group, in which Proteobacteria phylum increased significantly, including Arenimonas genus, Sphingomonadaceae family and Burkholderiaceae family. Moreover, the function structures based on the KEGG database of HT1 group was enriched in the benzene matter metabolism and bacterial motoricity in microbiota. In contrast, severe Cr-Pb-TPH co-pollutants in HT2 increased the abundance of Firmicutes. In details, the relative abundance of Streptococcus genus and Bacilli class raised sharply. The DNA replication functions in microbiota were enriched under severely contaminated soil as a result of high concentrations of heavy metals and TPH pollutants' damage to bacteria. Furthermore, according to the correlation analysis between microbes and the pollutants, Streptococcus, Neisseria, Aeromonas, Porphyromonas and Acinetobacter were suggested as the bioremediation bacteria for Cr and Pb polluted soils, while Syntrophaceae spp. and Immundisolibacter were suggested as the bioremediation bacteria for TPH polluted soil. The study took a survey on the microbiota shifts of the heavy metals and TPH polluted soils, and the microbe's biomarkers provided new insights for the candidate strains of biodegradation, while further researches are required to verify the biodegradation mechanism of these biomarkers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2020.111083DOI Listing

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