4.7 Article

Salinity and nutrient modulate soil bacterial communities in the coastal wetland of the Yellow River Delta, China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 12, Pages 14621-14631

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-020-11626-x

Keywords

Coastal wetland; Soil nutriture; Bacterial community; Salinization; The Yellow River Delta

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Henan Province [182300410165]
  2. Ph.D. Science Foundation of North China University of Water Resources and Electric Power [201901002]

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The Yellow River Delta is the largest and youngest estuarine and coastal wetland in China and bacterial communities in the soil are significantly influenced by factors related to seawater erosion, nutrient levels, and human disturbance. Seawater erosion drives the variations of marine oligotrophic bacterial communities in early succession stages, while nutrient availability enhances riverine copiotrophs in the late stages.
The Yellow River Delta is the largest and youngest estuarine and coastal wetland in China and is experiencing the most active interactions of seawater and freshwater in the world. Bacteria played multifaceted influence on soil biogeochemical processes, and it was necessary to investigate the intermodulation between the soil factors and bacterial communities. Soil samples were collected at sites with different salinity degree, vegetations, and interference. The sequences of bacilli were tested using 16S rRNA sequencing method and operational taxonomic units were classified with 97% similarity. The soil was highly salinized and oligotrophic, and the wetland was nitrogen-restricted. Redundancy analysis suggested that factors related with seawater erosion were principal to drive the changes of soil bacterial communities and then the nutrient level and human disturbance. A broader implication was that, in the early succession stages of the coastal ecosystem, seawater erosion was the key driver of the variations of marine oligotrophic bacterial communities, while the increasing nutrient availability may enhance in the abundance of the riverine copiotrophs in the late stages. This study provided new insights on the characteristics of soil bacterial communities in estuarine and coastal wetlands.

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