4.7 Article

Significant roles of core prokaryotic microbiota across soil profiles in an organic contaminated site: Insight into microbial assemblage, co-occurrence patterns, and potentially key ecological functions

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.116195

Keywords

Vertical distribution; Community assembly; Ecological functions; Core microbiota; Organic contaminated sites

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This study investigated the composition, structure, assembly mechanisms, and ecological roles of core microbiota in a typical organic contaminated site. The core microbiota had a lower species diversity but higher relative abundances compared to occasional taxa. It was mainly composed of Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Firmicutes. The assembly of core taxa was more influenced by geographical differentiation than environmental filtering, and they played pivotal roles in degrading organic contaminants and maintaining key biogeochemical cycles potentially.
Extreme environmental disturbances induced by organic contaminated sites impose serious impacts on soil microbiomes. However, our understanding of the responses of the core microbiota and its ecological roles in organic contaminated sites is limited. In this study, we took a typical organic contaminated site as an example and investigated the composition and structure, assembly mechanisms of core taxa and their roles in key ecological functions across soil profiles. Results presented that core microbiota with a considerably lower number of species (7.93%) than occasional taxa presented comparatively high relative abundances (38.04%) yet, which was mainly comprised of phyla Proteobacteria (49.21%), Actinobacteria (12.36%), Chloroflexi (10.63%), and Firmicutes (8.21%). Furthermore, core microbiota was more influenced by geographical differentiation than environmental filtering, which possessed broader niche widths and stronger phylogenetic signals for ecological preferences than occasional taxa. Null modelling suggested that stochastic processes dominated the assembly of the core taxa and maintained a stable proportion along soil depths. Core microbiota had a greater impact on microbial community stability and possessed higher functional redundancy than occasional taxa. Additionally, the structural equation model illustrated that core taxa played pivotal roles in degrading organic contaminants and maintaining key biogeochemical cycles potentially. Overall, this study deepens our knowledge of the ecology of core microbiota under complicated environmental conditions in organic contaminated sites, and provides a fundamental basis for preserving and potentially utilizing core microbiota to maintain soil health.

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