Use of the MicroResp TM method to assess Pollution-Induced Community Tolerance in the context of metal soil contamination

Microorganisms are known indicators of soil health, and there are already several microbial tools for assessing substance ecotoxicity, but there is still a need for practical new tools that are ecologically relevant in soil ecosystems. We developed a protocol based on the substrate-induced respirati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological indicators 2014, Vol.40, p.27-33
Hauptverfasser: Berard, Annette A., Mazzia, Christophe, Sappin-Didier, Valérie, Capowiez, Line, Capowiez, Yvan
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container_end_page 33
container_issue
container_start_page 27
container_title Ecological indicators
container_volume 40
creator Berard, Annette A.
Mazzia, Christophe
Sappin-Didier, Valérie
Capowiez, Line
Capowiez, Yvan
description Microorganisms are known indicators of soil health, and there are already several microbial tools for assessing substance ecotoxicity, but there is still a need for practical new tools that are ecologically relevant in soil ecosystems. We developed a protocol based on the substrate-induced respiration of a soil community using the MicroResp TM technique as part of a Pollution-Induced Community Tolerance (PICT) approach. We tested the technique in a long-term field experiment studying the effects of sewage treatment plant discharge with high Cd and Ni contents on plants and soil. We found that MicroResp TM can be used in PICT-bioassays to assess heavy metal (Cd) impact to soil microbial communities. Dose–response curves for soil Cd and soil microbial glucose mineralization were obtained on microrespirometric eco-toxicological bioassays with Cd, making it possible to calculate half maximal effective concentration (EC 50). EC 50 values were positively correlated with Cd concentrations in soil plots. A community-level physiological profile based on mineralization of different carbon substrates was established for each soil sample. Basal respiration and microbial active biomass were estimated, and the metabolic quotient qCO 2 was calculated. These ecotoxicological and ecophysiological biomarkers converge to suggest that metal gradient is associated with sludge-impacted soil microbial communities in terms of active biomass, catabolic structure, and allocation of carbon for energy requirements versus growth in response to Cd-induced tolerance. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate micro-SIR in a contaminated soil system as a tool for measuring microbial physiological traits and Pollution-Induced Community Tolerance.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.12.024
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title Use of the MicroResp TM method to assess Pollution-Induced Community Tolerance in the context of metal soil contamination
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