Bing Shan, Ruixia Hao, Hui Xu, Jiani Li, Junman Zhang, Yinhuang Li, Yubo Ye, Anhuai Lu
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Abstract The chromium slags left by industry emission has caused serious damage to the local ecological environment, and microorganisms were sensitive to the variation in the surrounding environmental factors. In this work, 14 soil samples around an abandoned chromate factory were collected. We utilized the 16S rRNA regions from soil DNA to explore the possible effects of environmental factors on soil bacterial communities. High-throughput DNA sequencing results suggested that bacterial communities varied greatly from different soil samples, but Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were predominant in all samples in the phylum level. In addition, Pseudarthrobacter, Thiobacillus, Paenisporosarcina, Sphingomonas, and Bacillus were abundant at a more refined species level. Based on redundancy analysis (RDA) and variation partitioning analysis (VPA), the results revealed that pH value, soil organic carbon (SOC), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), chromium (Cr) and lead (Pb) could obviously affect the bacterial community structure. Heavy metals, soil nutrients, and pH could explain 37.69%, 13.61%, and 31.41% of bacterial community variation, respectively. This study would provide a theoretical basis for future remediation of local Cr-contaminated soil.
期刊介绍:
Geomicrobiology Journal is a unified vehicle for research and review articles in geomicrobiology and microbial biogeochemistry. One or two special issues devoted to specific geomicrobiological topics are published each year. General articles deal with microbial transformations of geologically important minerals and elements, including those that occur in marine and freshwater environments, soils, mineral deposits and rock formations, and the environmental biogeochemical impact of these transformations. In this context, the functions of Bacteria and Archaea, yeasts, filamentous fungi, micro-algae, protists, and their viruses as geochemical agents are examined.
Articles may stress the nature of specific geologically important microorganisms and their activities, or the environmental and geological consequences of geomicrobiological activity.
The Journal covers an array of topics such as:
microbial weathering;
microbial roles in the formation and degradation of specific minerals;
mineralization of organic matter;
petroleum microbiology;
subsurface microbiology;
biofilm form and function, and other interfacial phenomena of geological importance;
biogeochemical cycling of elements;
isotopic fractionation;
paleomicrobiology.
Applied topics such as bioleaching microbiology, geomicrobiological prospecting, and groundwater pollution microbiology are addressed. New methods and techniques applied in geomicrobiological studies are also considered.