4.6 Article

Changes in diversity and composition of rhizosphere bacterial community during natural restoration stages in antimony mine

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12302

Keywords

Heavy metal pollution; Microbial community structure; 16S rRNA; Rhizosphere

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31970494]
  2. Research and Development Project of Hunan [2021NK2030]
  3. Aid program for Science and Technology Innovative Research Team in Higher Educational Instituions of Hunan [201937924]
  4. Scientific Research Project of Hunan Education Department [20A275]

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The study used a method of substituting space for time to investigate the impact of natural restoration on rhizosphere bacterial community. Different restoration stages showed significant differences in the composition and diversity of rhizosphere bacteria, with Actinobacteria increasing in middle restoration and Patescibacteria decreasing in later restoration. Several rhizosphere microbial communities in the early restoration stage were found to be preferable for remediation of polluted soil in Xikuangshan.
Background: Open pit antimony (Sb) mining causes serious soil pollution, and phytoremediation is a low-cost approach to remediate heavy metal contaminated soil. Rhizosphere bacteria play an important role in ecological restoration in mining areas. There is a knowledge gap on how to find suitable rhizosphere microorganisms to improve the phytoremediation effect. Understanding the differences of rhizosphere bacterial diversity in different restoration stages is helpful to find suitable bacteria for ecological restoration. Methods: A method of the substitution of space for time was used to study the effect of natural restoration on rhizosphere bacterial community. According to the dominant vegetation types (herb, shrub, and tree) in the natural restoration area of Sb mining, the early restoration (ER), middle restoration (MR), and later restoration (LR) from the largest Sb mine (Xikuangshan mine) in the world were selected to evaluate the differences in the composition and diversity of rhizosphere bacteria during three natural restoration stages. Each restoration stage had five samples. To determine the relationship between restoration stages and bacterial diversity in the rhizosphere, high throughput sequencing of PCR amplified were used. Results: Alpha diversity, as assessed by Chao indices, appeared lowest in ER but this trend was not seen with other diversity metrics, including the Simpson and Shannon. Beta diversity analysis suggested there were differences in rhizobacterial community structure associate with restoration stage. At the phylum level, natural restoration led to a significant increase in the relative abundance of Actinobacteria in the MR, and a significant decrease in the relative abundance of Patescibacteria in the LR. Additionally, Calditrichaeota, Deferribacteres and Epsilonbacteraeota were only found in ER. At the genus level, the relative abundance of RB41 and Haliangium were highest in LR plots, while that of Bacillus and Gaiella were highest in ER plots. Additionally, the Azorhizobium genus was only detected in the ER phase. Overall, our findings suggested that several rhizosphere microbial communities had significant differences among three natural restoration stages (ER, MR, and LR) and the rhizosphere bacterial communities mainly appeared in the early restoration stage can be preferred for remediation of pollution soil in Xikuangshan.

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