4.7 Article

Response of microbial communities and interactions to thallium in contaminated sediments near a pyrite mining area

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 248, Issue -, Pages 916-928

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.02.089

Keywords

High-throughput sequencing; Thallium pollution; Fe-metabolizing bacteria; (1)Spatial distribution

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41573008, 41873015, 41573119, 41773011, U1612442]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China [2014A030313527, 2017A030313247]
  3. Guangzhou University [BJ201709]
  4. Public Welfare Research Project of Zhejiang Province, China [LGF18E080013]
  5. Rural Non-point Source Pollution Comprehensive Management Technology Center of Guangdong Province
  6. 16th Challenge Cup Undergraduate Program
  7. Provincial Undergraduate Training Project for Innovation [201811078128]

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Thallium (Tl) is a well-recognized hazardous heavy metal with very high toxicity. It is usually concentrated in sulfide minerals, such as pyrite (FeS2), sphalerite (ZnS), chalcopyrite (CuS) and galena (PbS). Here, this study was carried out to investigate the indigenous microbial communities via 165 rRNA gene sequence analysis in typical surface sediments with various levels of Tl pollution (1.8-16.1 mg/kg) due to acid mine drainage from an active Tl-containing pyrite mining site in South China. It was found with more than 50 phyla from the domain Bacteria and 1 phyla from the domain Archaea. Sequences assigned to the genera Ferroplasma, Leptospirillum, Ferrovum, Metallibacterium, Acidithiobacillus, and Sulfuriferula manifested high relative abundances in all sequencing libraries from the relatively high Tl contamination. Canonical correspondence analysis further uncovered that the overall microbial community in this area was dominantly structured by the geochemical fractionation of Tl and geochemical parameters such as pH and Eh. Spearman's rank correlation analysis indicated a strong positive correlation between acidophilic Fe-metabolizing species and Tl-total, Tl-oxi, and Tl-res. The findings clarify potential roles of such phylotypes in the biogeochemical cycling of Tl, which may facilitate the development of in-situ bioremediation technology for Tl-contaminated sediments. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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