Influence of decades-long irrigation with secondary treated wastewater on soil microbial diversity, resistome dynamics, and antibiotrophy development.

Heliyon

University of Carthage, Laboratory of Plant Toxicology and Environmental Microbiology (LR18ES38), Faculty of Sciences of Bizerte, 7021, Bizerte, Tunisia.

Published: November 2024

In arid and semi-arid regions, the use of treated wastewater (TWW) for irrigation is gaining ground to alleviate pressure on natural water sources. Despite said treatment, the existing methods fail to eliminate potentially dangerous contaminants. As such, this study assessed the impact of long-term TWW irrigation (5 and 25 years) on soil physicochemical properties and bacterial resistance to heavy metals (Pb, Cu, Cd) and antibiotics (tetracycline and amoxicillin). The results revealed heightened salinity and conductivity and reduced pH in irrigated soils. TWW induces harmful effects by reducing microbial density and size, leading to the disappearance of sensitive populations. Conversely, resilient populations, which mainly utilize antibiotics as a carbon source, have adapted. Metagenomic 16S amplicon sequencing analysis demonstrated a shift, notably reducing , , and while increasing and in treated soils. Operational Taxonomic Units affiliated with either or and , were defined as indicators of the absence or presence of TWW contamination, respectively. We conclude that TWW irrigation significantly increases bacterial resistance to heavy metals, whereas the impact of antibiotics is nuanced, with antibiotrophy leveraging lower concentrations in treated soils.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11544057PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e39666DOI Listing

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