Santini Talitha C, Warren Lesley A, Kendra Kathryn E
School of Geography, Planning, and Environmental Management, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia Centre for Mined Land Rehabilitation, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia School of Earth and Environment, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia
School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2015 Aug;81(15):5026-36. doi: 10.1128/AEM.01238-15. Epub 2015 May 15.
Microbial communities in engineered terrestrial haloalkaline environments have been poorly characterized relative to their natural counterparts and are geologically recent in formation, offering opportunities to explore microbial diversity and assembly in dynamic, geochemically comparable contexts. In this study, the microbial community structure and geochemical characteristics of three geographically dispersed bauxite residue environments along a remediation gradient were assessed and subsequently compared with other engineered and natural haloalkaline systems. In bauxite residues, bacterial communities were similar at the phylum level (dominated by Proteobacteria and Firmicutes) to those found in soda lakes, oil sands tailings, and nuclear wastes; however, they differed at lower taxonomic levels, with only 23% of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) shared with other haloalkaline environments. Although being less diverse than natural analogues, bauxite residue harbored substantial novel bacterial taxa, with 90% of OTUs nonmatchable to cultured representative sequences. Fungal communities were dominated by Ascomycota and Basidiomycota, consistent with previous studies of hypersaline environments, and also harbored substantial novel (73% of OTUs) taxa. In bauxite residues, community structure was clearly linked to geochemical and physical environmental parameters, with 84% of variation in bacterial and 73% of variation in fungal community structures explained by environmental parameters. The major driver of bacterial community structure (salinity) was consistent across natural and engineered environments; however, drivers differed for fungal community structure between natural (pH) and engineered (total alkalinity) environments. This study demonstrates that both engineered and natural terrestrial haloalkaline environments host substantial repositories of microbial diversity, which are strongly shaped by geochemical drivers.
与自然环境中的微生物群落相比,工程化陆地盐碱环境中的微生物群落特征鲜为人知,且其形成时间相对较近,这为在动态的、地球化学条件可比的环境中探索微生物多样性和群落组装提供了机会。在本研究中,我们评估了沿修复梯度分布的三个地理位置分散的铝土矿残渣环境的微生物群落结构和地球化学特征,并随后与其他工程化和自然盐碱系统进行了比较。在铝土矿残渣中,细菌群落在门水平上(以变形菌门和厚壁菌门为主)与苏打湖、油砂尾矿和核废料中的细菌群落相似;然而,在较低分类水平上存在差异,与其他盐碱环境仅有23%的可操作分类单元(OTU)相同。尽管铝土矿残渣中的微生物多样性低于自然类似物,但仍含有大量新的细菌分类群,90%的OTU与已培养的代表性序列不匹配。真菌群落以子囊菌门和担子菌门为主,这与之前对高盐环境的研究一致,并且也含有大量新的(73%的OTU)分类群。在铝土矿残渣中,群落结构与地球化学和物理环境参数明显相关,环境参数解释了细菌群落结构84%的变异和真菌群落结构73%的变异。细菌群落结构的主要驱动因素(盐度)在自然和工程化环境中是一致的;然而,真菌群落结构的驱动因素在自然(pH值)和工程化(总碱度)环境之间有所不同。这项研究表明,工程化和自然陆地盐碱环境都拥有大量微生物多样性资源,这些资源受到地球化学驱动因素的强烈影响。