Characterization of keystone taxa and microbial metabolic potentials in copper tailing soils

Copper mining has caused serious soil contamination and threaten the balance of underground ecosystem. Effects of metal contamination on the soil microbial community assembly and their multifunctionality are still unclear. In this study, the keystone taxa and microbial metabolic potential of soil mi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2023, Vol.30 (1), p.1216-1230
Hauptverfasser: Fan, Qiao, Chen, Yeqiang, Xu, Rui, Guo, Zhaohui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Copper mining has caused serious soil contamination and threaten the balance of underground ecosystem. Effects of metal contamination on the soil microbial community assembly and their multifunctionality are still unclear. In this study, the keystone taxa and microbial metabolic potential of soil microorganisms surrounding a typical copper tailing were investigated. Results showed that pH and metal contents of adjacent soil in copper tailing increased, which largely reduced soil microbial communities’ diversity. Metal contaminated soils enriched a group of keystone taxa with metal-tolerance such as Bacteroidota (20–54%) and Firmicutes (24–48%), which were distinct from the uncontaminated background soils that dominated by Proteobacteria (19–24%) and Actinobacteria (13–24%). In the contaminated soils, these keystone taxa were identified as Alistipes , Bacteroides , and Faecalibacterium , suggesting their adaptation to the metal-rich environment. Co-occurrence network analysis showed that the microbial community was loosely connected in the metal contaminated soils with a lower number of nodes and links. Co-occurrence networks further revealed that the dynamics of keystone taxa significantly correlated with copper content. Functional gene analysis of soil microorganisms indicated that metal contamination might inhibit important microbial metabolic potentials, such as secondary metabolites biosynthesis, carbon fixation, and nitrogen fixation. Results also found the flexible adaptation strategies of soil microbial communities to metal-rich environments with metal-resistance or bio-transformation, such as efflux ( CusB / CusF / CzsB and pcoB / copB ) and oxidation ( aoxAB ). These findings provide insight into the interaction between keystone taxa and soil environment, which is helpful to reveal the microbial metabolic potential and physiological characteristics in tailing contaminated soils.
ISSN:0944-1344
1614-7499
DOI:10.1007/s11356-022-22294-4