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  4. Effect of organic carbon and metal accumulation on the bacterial communities in sulphidogenic sediments

Effect of organic carbon and metal accumulation on the bacterial communities in sulphidogenic sediments

Author(s)
Bueche, Matthieu  
Laboratoire de biodiversité du sol  
Junier, Pilar  
Laboratoire de microbiologie  
Date issued
2016
In
Environmental Science and Pollution Research, Springer
Vol
23
No
11
From page
10443
To page
10456
Subjects
Heavy metals Nutrient deprivation Starvation Endosporulation Firmicutes Lake Cadagno
Abstract
A unique geochemical setting in Lake Cadagno, Switzerland, has led to the accumulation of insoluble metal sulphides in the sedimentary record as the result of past airborne pollution. This offers an exceptional opportunity to study the effect of these metals on the bacterial communities in sediments, and in particular to investigate further the link between metal contamination and an increase in the populations of endospore-forming bacteria observed previously in other metal-contaminated sediments. A decrease in organic carbon and total bacterial counts was correlated with an increase in the numbers of endospores in the oldest sediment samples, showing the first environmental evidence of a decrease in nutrient availability as a trigger of sporulation. Proteobacteria and Firmicutes were the two dominant bacterial phyla throughout the sediment, the former in an area with high sulphidogenic activity, and the latter in the oldest samples. Even though the dominant Firmicutes taxa were stable along the sediment core and did not vary with changes in metal contamination, the prevalence of some molecular species like <i>Clostridium</i> sp. was positively correlated with metal sulphide concentration. However, this cannot be generalized to all endospore-forming species. Overall, the community composition supports the hypothesis of sporulation as the main mechanism explaining the dominance of endospore formers in the deepest part of the sediment core, while metal contamination in the form of insoluble metal sulphide deposits appears not to be linked with sporulation as a mechanism of metal tolerance in this sulphidogenic ecosystem.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/65135
DOI
10.1007/s11356-016-6056-z
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Bueche_M._Effect_of_organic_20190527.pdf

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