4.7 Article

Dynamic changes in the microbial community in the surface seawater of Jiaozhou Bay after crude oil spills: An in situ microcosm study*

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 307, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119496

Keywords

16S rDNA; Marine environment; Marine oil spill biodegradation; Microcosm model; Bacterial community

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China, China [61902368]
  2. Shandong Pro-vincial Natural Science Foundation, China [ZR2021YQ22, ZR2020YD41]

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In this study, we investigated the response of indigenous microbial community in Jiaozhou Bay to crude oil and dispersant treatment. The results showed that dispersant treatment was more advantageous for certain microbial species and had stronger effects on the structure and degradation functions of the microbial community compared to crude oil.
The changes in the composition and structure of microbial communities in Jiaozhou Bay are strongly affected by marine oil pollution, but the outcomes of the microbial responses and effects of dispersant application remain unclear. Herein, we performed an in situ microcosm study to investigate the response of the indigenous microbial community under crude oil alone and combined oil and dispersant treatment in the surface seawater of a semi-enclosed marine area of Jiaozhou Bay. The dynamics of the bacterial classification based on 16s rDNA sequencing were used to assess the changes with the crude oil concentration, dispersant use, and time. The crude oil resulted in a high abundance of the genera Pseudohongiella, Cycloclasticus, Marivita, and C1-B045 from the Gammaproteobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria classes, suggesting for hydrocarbon degradation. However, the dispersant treatment was more advantageous for Pacificibacter, Marivita, and Loktanella. Besides accelerating the rate of bacterial community succession, the dispersants had significantly stronger effects on the structure of the bacterial community and the degradation functions than the oil. A higher dose of oil exposure corresponded to fewer dominant species with a high relative abundance. Our study provides information for screening potential degradation bacteria and assessing the risks that oil spills pose to marine ecosystems.

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