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Ecological network analysis reveals distinctive microbial modules associated with heavy metal contamination of abandoned mine soils in Korea
2021
Chun, Seong-Jun | Kim, Young-Joong | Cui, Yingshun | Nam, Kyong-Hee
Heavy metal pollution in soil around abandoned mine sites is one of the most critical environmental issues worldwide. Soil microbes form complex communities and perform ecological functions individually or in cooperation with other organisms to adapt to harsh environments. In this study, we investigated the distribution patterns of bacterial and fungal communities in non-contaminated and heavy metal-contaminated soil of the abandoned Samkwang mine in Korea to explore microbial interaction mechanisms and their modular structures. As expected, the bacterial and fungal community structures showed large differences depending on the degree of heavy metal contamination. The microbial network was divided into three modules based on the levels of heavy metal pollution: heavy metal-tolerant (HM-Tol), heavy metal-mid-tolerant (HM-mTol), and heavy metal-sensitive (HM-Sens) modules. Taxonomically, microbes assigned to Vicinamibacterales, Pedosphaeraceae, Nitrosomonadaceae, and Gemmatimonadales were the major groups constituting the HM-Tol module. Among the detected heavy metals (As, Pb, Cd, Cu, and Zn), copper concentrations played a key role in the formation of the HM-Tol module. In addition, filamentous fungi (Fusarium and Mortierella) showed potential interactions with bacteria (Nitrosomonadaceae) that could contribute to module stability in heavy metal-contaminated areas. Overall, heavy metal contamination was accompanied by distinct microbial communities, which could participate in the bioremediation of heavy metals. Analysis of the microbial interactions among bacteria and fungi in the presence of heavy metals could provide fundamental information for developing bioremediation mechanisms for the recovery of heavy metal-contaminated soil.
Show more [+] Less [-]Enhancement effect of earthworm (Eisenia fetida) on acetochlor biodegradation in soil and possible mechanisms
2018
Hao, Yueqi | Zhao, Lixia | Sun, Yang | Li, Xiaojing | Weng, Liping | Xu, Huijuan | Li, Yongtao
Acetochlor is a widely used chloroacetanilide herbicide and has posed environmental risks in soil and water due to its toxicity and high leaching capacity. Earthworm represents the dominant invertebrate in soil and can promote the decomposition of organic pollutants. The effect of earthworm on acetochlor degradation in soil was studied by soil column experiment with or without acetochlor and earthworm in sterile and natural soils. The degradation capacities of drilosphere components to acetochlor were investigated by microcosm experiments. Bacterial and fungal acetochlor degraders stimulated by earthworm were identified by high-throughput sequencing. The degradation kinetics of acetochlor suggested that both indigenous microorganisms and earthworm played important roles in acetochlor degradation. Acetochlor degradation was quicker in soil with earthworms than without earthworms, with the degradation rates increased by 62.3 ± 15.2% and 9.7 ± 1.7% in sterile and natural treatments respectively. The result was related to the neutralized pH, higher enzyme activities and enhanced soil microbial community diversity and richness in the presence of earthworms. Earthworm cast was the degradation hotpot in drilosphere and exhibited better anaerobic degradation capacity in microcosm experiments. The acetochlor degradation rate of cast in anaerobic environment was 12.0 ± 0.1% quicker than that in aerobic environment. Residual acetochlor in soil conferred a long-term impairment on fungal community, and this inhibition could be repaired by earthworm. Earthworm stimulated indigenous degraders like Sphingomonas and Microascales and carried suspected intestinal degraders like Mortierella and Escherichia_coli to degradation process. Cometabolism between nutrition cycle species and degraders in casts also contributed to its faster degradation rates. The study also presented some possible anaerobic degradation species like Rhodococcus, Pseudomonas_fulva and Methylobacillus.
Show more [+] Less [-]Bio-activation of soil with beneficial microbes after soil fumigation reduces soil-borne pathogens and increases tomato yield
2021
Cheng, Hongyan | Zhang, Daqi | Ren, Lirui | Song, Zhaoxin | Li, Qingjie | Wu, Jiajia | Fang, Wensheng | Huang, Bin | Yan, Dongdong | Li, Yuan | Wang, Qiuxia | Cao, Aocheng
Soil-borne diseases have become increasingly problematic for farmers producing crops intensively under protected agriculture. Although soil fumigants are convenient and effective for minimizing the impact of soil-borne disease, they are most often detrimental to beneficial soil microorganisms. Previous research showed that bio-activation of soil using biological control agents present in biofertilizers or organic fertilizers offered promise as a strategy for controlling soil-borne pathogens when the soil was bio-activated after fumigation. Our research sought to determine how bio-activation can selectively inhibit pathogens while promoting the recovery of beneficial microbes. We monitored changes in the soil’s physicochemical properties, its microbial community and reductions in soil-borne pathogens. We found that the population density of Fusarium and Phytophthora were significantly reduced and tomato yield was significantly increased when the soil was bio-activated. Soil pH and soil catalase activity were significantly increased, and the soil’s microbial community structure was changed, which may have enhanced the soil’s ability to reduce Fusarium and Phytophthora. Our results showed that soil microbial diversity and relative abundance of beneficial microorganisms (such as Sphingomonas, Bacillus, Mortierella and Trichoderma) increased shortly after bio-activation of the soil, and were significantly and positively correlated with pathogen suppression. The reduction in pathogens may have been due to a combination of fumigation-fertilizer that reduced pathogens directly, or the indirect effect of an optimized soil microbiome that improved the soil’s non-biological factors (such as soil pH, fertility structure), enhanced the soil’s functional properties and increased tomato yield.
Show more [+] Less [-]Fungal hyphae stimulate bacterial degradation of 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM)
2013
Knudsen, Berith Elkær | Ellegaard-Jensen, Lea | Albers, Christian Nyrop | Rosendahl, Søren | Aamand, Jens
Introduction of specific degrading microorganisms into polluted soil or aquifers is a promising remediation technology provided that the organisms survive and spread in the environment. We suggest that consortia, rather than single strains, may be better suited to overcome these challenges.Here we introduced a fungal–bacterial consortium consisting of Mortierella sp. LEJ702 and the 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM)-degrading Aminobacter sp. MSH1 into small sand columns. A more rapid mineralisation of BAM was obtained by the consortium compared to MSH1 alone especially at lower moisture contents. Results from quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) demonstrated better spreading of Aminobacter when Mortierella was present suggesting that fungal hyphae may stimulate bacterial dispersal. Extraction and analysis of BAM indicated that translocation of the compound was also affected by the fungal hyphae in the sand. This suggests that fungal–bacterial consortia are promising for successful bioremediation of pesticide contamination.
Show more [+] Less [-]Sugarcane cultivar-dependent changes in assemblage of soil rhizosphere fungal communities in subtropical ecosystem
2022
Tayyab, Muhammad | Fallah, Nyumah | Zhang, Caifang | Pang, Ziqin | Islam, Waqar | Lin, Sheng | Lin, Wenxiong | Zhang, Hua
Sugarcane cultivars (Saccharum officinarum L.) are widely cultivated for both sugar and renewable energy in China. The response of rhizosphere fungal composition and diversity to different emerging sugarcane cultivars is limited. Therefore, utilizing high-throughput sequencing, we explored fungal communities’ structure in soils adhering to six sugarcane cultivars’ roots (Guitang 08–120, Regan14-62, Guitang 08–1180, Haizhe 22, Liucheng 05–136, Taitang 22) in Guangxi Province, China. Our results suggested that sugarcane varieties significantly altered rhizosphere soil attributes, with Haizhe 22 having substantially lower soil pH, organic matter (OM), available phosphorus (AP), and soil water contents (SWC) than others cultivars. Different sugarcane varieties did not substantially affected the Shannon fungal diversity index, but the apparent effect on fungal richness was significant. Beta diversity analysis revealed that “Haizhe 22” distinguished the fungal community from the other five cultivars. Soil pH, OM, cultivars, and soil moisture were crucial determinants in shaping soil fungal composition. The Haizhe 22 rhizosphere significantly enriched the operational taxonomic units (OTUs) assigned to two fungal genera (Cephalotheca and Sagenomella), while rhizosphere of other verities significantly enriched the OTUs assigned to four fungal genera (Chaetomium, Chaetosphaeria, Mortierella, and Talaromyces), suggesting their essential role in plant development, disease tolerance, and bioremediation. These findings may help in selecting or breeding innovative genotypes capable of supporting abundant rhizosphere fungi beneficial to plants that would likely improve crops’ agronomic potential and maintain soil ecosystem sustainability.
Show more [+] Less [-]Impact of rhizosphere microorganisms on arsenic (As) transformation and accumulation in a traditional Chinese medical plant
2021
Li, Jiao-Jiao | Yang, Long | Miao, Cui-Ping | Teng, Ya-Jun | Fu, Zi-Hao | Cheng, Chang-Lei | Chang, Xue-Xiu | Qian, Yu | Zhao, Li-Xing
Panax notoginseng is an important traditional medicinal plant, but the commercial value is threatened by root-rot disease caused by rhizosphere microbes and a potential health risk caused by plant arsenic (As) accumulation. Whether rhizospheric microbes isolated from P. notoginseng rhizosphere soil could impact As uptake and transport into P. notoginseng is not yet known. Among the three root-rot disease-causing pathogens Fusarium flocciferum (PG 1), Fusarium oxysporum (PG 2), and Fusarium solani (PG 3) and one root-rot disease biocontrol fungus Trichoderma koningiopsis (FC 1) and five biocontrol-exerting bacterial species Bacillus siamensis (BC 1), Delftia acidovorans (BC 2), Brevibacillus formosus (BC 3), Mortierella alpine (BC 4), and Bacillus subtilis (BC 5), one As-resistant pathogen and four biocontrol microorganisms with As-resistant ability were identified. The As-transforming ability of the identified fungi and bacteria was ranked in the order of FC 1 > PG 1 and BC 2 > BC 3 > BC 1, respectively. Then, the As-resistant biocontrol and pathogenic microbes were initiated to colonize the rhizosphere of 1-year-old P. notoginseng seedlings growing in artificially As(V)-contaminated soil to evaluate the impact of microbe inoculation on P. notoginseng As uptake and transport capacity. Concentration of As in P. notoginseng tissues decreased in the order of the sequence stem > root > leaf. Compared to treatment without colonization by microorganism, inoculation with microorganisms increased As root uptake efficiency and root As concentration, especially under treatment of inoculation by BC 2 and PG 1 + BC 2. As transport efficiency from root to stem decreased by inoculation with microorganism, especially under treatment with inoculation of BC 2 and PG 1 + BC 2. However, the impact of microorganism colonization on As stem to leaf transport efficiency was not obvious. In summary, inoculation with rhizosphere microbes may increase As accumulation in P. notoginseng root, especially when using bacteria with high As transformation ability. Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate the As transformation capacity before applying biological control microorganism to the rhizosphere of P. notoginseng.
Show more [+] Less [-]An emerging chemical fumigant: two-sided effects of dazomet on soil microbial environment and plant response
2022
Chen, Ran | Jiang, Weitao | Xu, Shaozhuo | Fan, Hai | Chen, Xuesen | Shen, Xiang | Yin, Chengmiao | Mao, Zhiquan
Methyl bromide has been banned worldwide because it causes damage to the ozone layer and the environment. To find a substitute for methyl bromide, the relationships among fumigation, plant growth, and the microbial community in replant soil require further study. We performed pot and field experiments to investigate the effects of dazomet fumigation on soil properties and plant performance. Changes in soil microbial community structure and diversity were assessed using high-throughput sequencing, and plant physiological performance and soil physicochemical properties were also measured. Dazomet fumigation enhanced photosynthesis and promoted plant growth in replant soil; it altered soil physical and chemical properties and reduced soil enzyme activities, although these parameters gradually recovered over time. After dazomet fumigation, the dominant soil phyla changed, microbial diversity decreased significantly, the relative abundance of biocontrol bacteria such as Mortierella increased, and the relative abundance of pathogenic bacteria such as Fusarium decreased. Over the course of the experiment, the soil microbial flora changed dynamically, and soil enzyme activities and other physical and chemical properties also recovered to a certain extent. This result suggested that the effect of dazomet on soil microorganisms was temporary. However, fumigation also led to an increase in some resistant pathogens, such as Trichosporon, that affect soil function and health. Therefore, it is necessary to consider potential negative impacts of dazomet on the soil environment and to perform active environmental risk management in China.
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