4.7 Article

Multiple factors influence bacterial community diversity and composition in soils with rare earth element and heavy metal co-contamination

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112749

Keywords

Rare earth tailing dam; Heavy metals; Soil bacteria community; High-throughput sequencing; Soil physicochemical properties

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Planning Project of Inner Mongolia [JH20180633]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41963008, 41563009]
  3. Major Science and Technology Projects in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region [ZDZX2018054]

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This study revealed that soil bacterial communities co-contaminated with rare earth elements (REEs) and heavy metals (HMs) had lower richness and diversity, with compositions mainly influenced by total organic carbon and available potassium. The effects of REEs and HMs on bacterial communities were similar, but their combined contributions were greater than individual effects. In addition, certain bacterial taxa, such as Exiguobacterium and metal-tolerant microorganisms, were sensitive to REEs and HMs in contaminated soil.
The effects of long-term rare earth element (REE) and heavy metal (HM) contamination on soil bacterial communities remains poorly understood. In this study, soil samples co-contaminated with REEs and HMs were collected from a rare-earth tailing dam. The bacterial community composition and diversity were analyzed through Illumina high-throughput sequencing with 16S rRNA gene amplicons. Bacterial community richness and diversity were lower in the co-contaminated soils than in the uncontaminated soils, with clearly different bacterial community compositions. The results showed that total organic carbon and available potassium were the most important factors affecting bacterial community richness and diversity, followed by the REE and HM contents. Although the canonical correspondence analysis results showed that an REE alone had no obvious effects on bacterial community structures, we found that the combined effects of soil physicochemical properties and REE and HM contents regulated bacterial community structure and composition. The effects of REEs and HMs on bacterial communities were similar, whereas their combined contributions were greater than the individual effects of REEs or HMs. Some bacterial taxa were worth noting. These specifically included the plant growth-promoting bacteria Exiguobacterium (sensitive to REEs and HMs) and oligotrophic microorganisms with metal tolerance (prevalent in contaminated soil); moreover, relative abundance of JTB255-Marine Benthic Group, Rhodobacteraceae, Erythrobacter, and Truepera may be correlated with REEs. This study was the first to investigate the responses of bacterial communities to REE and HM co-contamination. The current results have major implications for the ecological risk assessment of environments co-contaminated with REEs and HMs.

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