Phycospheric bacteria limits the effect of nitrogen and phosphorus imbalance on diatom bloom

Human activities have caused an imbalance in the input nitrogen and phosphorus (N/P) in the biosphere. The imbalance of N/P is one of the characteristics of water eutrophication, which is the fundamental factor responsible for the blooms. The effects of the N/P imbalance on diatom and phycospheric b...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-07, Vol.935, p.173477-173477, Article 173477
Hauptverfasser: Zheng, Ningning, Hu, Wei, Liu, Yu, Li, Zun, Jiang, Yuxin, Bartlam, Mark, Wang, Yingying
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Human activities have caused an imbalance in the input nitrogen and phosphorus (N/P) in the biosphere. The imbalance of N/P is one of the characteristics of water eutrophication, which is the fundamental factor responsible for the blooms. The effects of the N/P imbalance on diatom and phycospheric bacteria in blooms are poorly understood. In this study, the N/P molar ratio in real water (14:1) and the predicted N/P molar ratio in future water (65:1) were simulated to analyze the response of Cyclotella sp. and phycospheric bacteria to the N/P imbalance. The results showed that the N/P imbalance inhibited the growth of Cyclotella sp., but prolonged diatom bloom duration. The resistance of Cyclotella sp. to the N/P imbalance is related to phycospheric bacteria, and there are dynamic regulatory mechanisms within the phycospheric bacteria community to resist the N/P imbalance: (1) the increase of HNA bacterial density, the decrease of LNA bacterial density, (2) the increase of phycospheric bacterial diversity and eutrophic bacteria abundance, and the change of denitrifying bacteria abundance, (3) the activity of nitrogen and phosphorus metabolism of HNA bacteria enhanced, while that of LNA bacteria decreased. And the gene hosts of nitrogen and phosphorus metabolism were most enriched in Proteobacteria, indicating that Proteobacteria played an important role in maintaining the stability of phycospheric bacteria and was the dominant phylum resistant to the N/P imbalance. This study clarified that the algal-bacteria system was resistant to the N/P imbalance and implied that the N/P imbalance had little effect on the occurrence of diatom bloom events due to the presence of phycospheric bacteria. [Display omitted] •The N/P imbalance inhibited the growth of Cyclotella sp., but prolonged bloom duration.•The N/P imbalance increased the abundance of eutrophic bacteria and the denitrifying bacteria.•Phycospheric bacteria have dynamic regulatory mechanisms to resist the N/P imbalance.•Alphaproteobacteria and Betaproteobacteria were the dominant bacteria.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173477