4.6 Article

Assessment of Temporal Effects of a Mud Volcanic Eruption on the Bacterial Community and Their Predicted Metabolic Functions in the Mud Volcanic Sites of Niaosong, Southern Taiwan

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9112315

Keywords

mud volcano; sulfur-reducing bacteria; methanogens; hydrocarbon degraders; 16S rRNA gene sequencing; PICRUSt2

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 109-2116-M-194-013-]
  2. Cheng Hsin General Hospital [CHGH110-(N)19]
  3. [MOST 109-2116-M-194-013]

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The microbial communities in mud volcanoes are important for the global methane cycle. This study focused on the temporal effects of volcanic eruptions on bacterial diversity and functions in southern Taiwan. The results showed significant changes in community composition and predicted functions over time, influenced by both environmental factors and microbial interactions.
The microbial communities inhabiting mud volcanoes have received more attention due to their noteworthy impact on the global methane cycle. However, the impact of temporal effects of volcanic eruptions on the microbial community's diversity and functions remain poorly characterized. This study aimed to underpin the temporal variations in the bacterial community's diversity and PICRUSt-predicted functional profile changes of mud volcanic sites located in southern Taiwan using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The physicochemical analysis showed that the samples were slightly alkaline and had elevated levels of Na+, Cl-, and SO42-. Comparatively, the major and trace element contents were distinctly higher, and tended to be increased in the long-period samples. Alpha diversity metrics revealed that the bacterial diversity and abundance were lesser in the initial period, but increased over time. Instead, day 96 and 418 samples showed reduced bacterial abundance, which may have been due to the dry spell that occurred before each sampling. The initial-period samples were significantly abundant in haloalkaliphilic marine-inhabiting, hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial genera such as Marinobacter, Halomonas, Marinobacterium, and Oceanimonas. Sulfur-reducing bacteria such as Desulfurispirillum and Desulfofarcimen were found dominant in the mid-period samples, whereas the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina was abundant in the long-period samples. Unfortunately, heavy precipitation encountered during the mid and long periods may have polluted the volcanic site with animal pathogens such as Desulfofarcimen and Erysipelothrix. The functional prediction results showed that lipid biosynthesis and ubiquinol pathways were significantly abundant in the initial days, and the super pathway of glucose and xylose degradation was rich in the long-period samples. The findings of this study highlighted that the temporal effects of a mud volcanic eruption highly influenced the bacterial diversity, abundance, and functional profiles in our study site.

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