Seasonal effects of river flow on microbial community coalescence and diversity in a riverine network.

Xia Luo,Xinyi Xiang,Yuanhao Yang,Guoyi Huang,K. Fu,Rongxiao Che,Liqiang Chen

Published 2020 in FEMS Microbiology Ecology

ABSTRACT

Terrestrial microbial communities may take advantage of running waters and runoff to enter rivers and mix with aquatic microorganisms. However, the environmental factors governing the interchange of microbial community within watercourse and its surrounding environment and the composition of the resulting community are often underestimated. The present study investigated the effect of flow rate on the mixing of water, soil, sediment, and biofilm at four sites along Lancang River and one branch in winter and summer and in turn, the resultant changes in the microbial community within each habitat. 16S rRNA gene-based Illumina high-throughput sequencing illustrated that bacterial communities were apparently distinct among biofilm, water, soil, and sediment. Biofilms had the lowest richness, Shannon diversity and evenness indices compared with other habitats, and those three indices in all habitats increased significantly from winter to summer. SourceTracker analysis showed a significant coalescence between the bacterial communities of sediment, water and biofilm samples at lower flow rate. Additionally, the proportion of Betaproteobacteria in sediment and biofilms increased with the decrease of flow rate, suggesting the flow rate had strong impact on microbial community composition and exchange among aquatic habitats. These results were further confirmed by mantel test and a linear regression analysis. Microbial community in all samples exhibited a significant but very weak distance-decay relationship (r = 0.093, p = 0.024). Turbidity explained more of the variations in water bacterial communities in summer (i.e. rainy season) (BIOENV, r = 0.92). Together, these results suggest that dispersal is an important factor affecting bacterial community structure in this system.

PUBLICATION RECORD

CITATION MAP

EXTRACTION MAP

CLAIMS

  • No claims are published for this paper.

CONCEPTS

  • No concepts are published for this paper.

REFERENCES

Showing 1-85 of 85 references · Page 1 of 1

CITED BY

Showing 1-59 of 59 citing papers · Page 1 of 1