4.7 Article

The legacy of trace metal deposition from historical anthropogenic river management: A regional driver of offshore sedimentary microbial diversity

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 400, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123164

Keywords

Benthic ecosystems; Microbial Community; Estuarine gradient; Historical events; Metal distribution

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China [2018YFC1406603, 2016YFA0601402, 2013CB956504]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31530008, 31870483]

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River management, both modern and historical, have dramatically modified offshore environments. While numerous studies have described the modern impacts, very few have evaluated the legacies remaining from hundreds of years ago. Herein, we show trace metal enrichment in the surface sediment of the abandoned Yellow River Delta, hypothesized to be associated with ancient river management. Essentially, anthropogenic modification caused the river to shift, creating a 12.4 x 10(3) km(2) area with elevated trace metals; characterized by clear metal deposition gradients. Geographical factors related to the ancient river mouth had the most significant influences on Zn (explained by distance to the river mouth, DTM) and Cd (DTM and sediment salinity), while the sediment absorptive capacity was associated with the reallocation of Cu (clay, silt, and iron), Ni (clay and iron), and Pb (silt and iron). Trace metal legacies showed stronger influences on prokaryotic diversity than on micro-eukaryotic diversity, with the former best described by changes in rare, rather than dominant families and classes, and explainable by an overlapping micro-niche model. The ancient river's legacies provide evidence of longer-term human disturbance over hundreds of years; as its impacts on associated benthic microbiomes have led to lessons for modern-day waterway management of benthic ecosystems.

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