4.3 Article

Watershed-scale landuse is associated with temporal and spatial compositional variation in Lake Michigan tributary bacterial communities

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 3, Pages 862-874

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2021.02.009

Keywords

Bacterial diversity; Great Lakes tributaries; Landuse; Landscape ecology; Watershed ecology; Riverscapes

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Fishery Trust
  2. Fisheries Division of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources
  3. U.S. Geological Survey Aquatic GAP Program
  4. Michigan State University

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The study focused on characterizing and comparing the taxonomic composition and diversity of bacterial communities in different rivers of the Lake Michigan basin. It found that differences in bacterial community composition among rivers were significantly associated with inter-stream geographic distance, stream hydrology, and variation in stream properties tied to watershed landuse patterns.
Populations of stream organisms across trophic levels, including microbial taxa, are adapted to physical and biotic stream features, and are sentinels of geological and hydrological landscape processes and anthropogenic disturbance. Stream bacterial diversity and composition can have profound effects on resident and migratory species in Great Lakes tributaries. Study objectives were to characterize and compare the taxonomic composition and diversity of bacterial communities in 18 rivers of the Lake Michigan basin during April and June 2019 and to quantify associations with stream and watershed physical features and dominant landuse practices. River water was filtered, and genomic DNA was extracted from filtrate using antiseptic techniques. We performed high-throughput amplicon sequencing using the highly variable V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene to characterize microbial community composition and diversity. Effects of landscape-scale landuse, environmental variables and dispersal predictors (e.g., inter-stream distance) on community compositional differences were quantified. Greater than 90% of variation in bacterial relative abundance between rivers and time were attributed to 11 phyla representing 10,800 operational taxonomic units. Inter-stream geographic distance, stream hydrology, and variation in stream properties that were tied to patterns of watershed landuse were significantly associated with differences in bacterial community composition among streams at both sampling time periods. based on Bray-Curtis distances. Understanding how environmental characteristics and watershed-scale landuse influence lower trophic level stream communities such as bacteria will inform managers as biological indicators of ecosystem health, sources of disturbance, and current and future bottom-up trophic changes in coupled tributaryGreat Lakes ecosystems. (c) 2021 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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