4.7 Article

Effects of combining flow intermittency and exposure to emerging contaminants on the composition and metabolic response of streambed biofilm bacterial communities

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 877, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162818

Keywords

Contaminants of emerging concern; Streambed biofilms; Desiccation; Global change; Ecosystem services

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This study examined the impact of desiccation and pollution on the composition and metabolism of stream biofilm bacterial communities. The integration of biofilm community composition analysis, metabolome characterization, and dissolved organic matter analysis revealed strong genotype-to-phenotype interconnections. Desiccation had a stronger effect than emerging contaminants, but the biofilm communities did modify the chemical composition of their environment under pollution.
Freshwater ecosystems are characterised by the co-occurrence of stressors that simultaneously affect the biota. Among these, flow intermittency and chemical pollution severely impair the diversity and functioning of streambed bacterial communities. Using an artificial streams mesocosm facility, this study examined how desiccation and pollution caused by emerging contaminants affect the composition of stream biofilm bacterial communities, their metabolic profiles, and interactions with their environment. Through an integrative analysis of the composition of biofilm communities, characterization of their metabolome and composition of the dissolved organic matter, we found strong genotype-to -phenotype interconnections. The strongest correlation was found between the composition and metabolism of the bac-terial community, both of which were influenced by incubation time and desiccation. Unexpectedly, no effect of the emerging contaminants was observed, which was due to the low concentration of the emerging contaminants and the dominant impact of desiccation. However, biofilm bacterial communities modified the chemical composition of their environment under the effect of pollution. Considering the tentatively identified classes of metabolites, we hypothesised that the biofilm response to desiccation was mainly intracellular while the response to chemical pollution was extracellular. The present study demonstrates that metabolite and dissolved organic matter profiling may be effec-tively integrated with compositional analysis of stream biofilm communities to yield a more complete picture of changes in response to stressors.

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