Bacterial community composition shaped by water chemistry and geographic distance in an anthropogenically disturbed river.

Peng Wang, Jun Zhao, Hanyu Xiao, Wenjing Yang, Xiaofang Yu
Author Information
  1. Peng Wang: School of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China; Key Laboratory of Poyang Lake Wetland and Watershed Research, Ministry of Education, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China. Electronic address: wangpengjlu@jxnu.edu.cn.
  2. Jun Zhao: School of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China.
  3. Hanyu Xiao: School of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China.
  4. Wenjing Yang: Key Laboratory of Poyang Lake Wetland and Watershed Research, Ministry of Education, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China.
  5. Xiaofang Yu: School of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330022, China.

Abstract

'Core bacterial communities', bacterial species that are found consistently throughout a river continuum, have previously been identified. However, variations in core and non-core bacterial community structure, as well as the relationships between these communities and water chemistry or geographic distance have not been well studied. Here, we sampled in the entire course of the Le'an River, China, and explored the bacterial community composition at each site using Illumina high-throughput sequencing. The proportion of sequence reads assigned to the core community was ~95% in the upper and middle reaches, gradually decreasing below 90% in the lower reaches. Both the Chao1 richness index and the Shannon diversity index of the bacterial communities were significantly higher in the wet season than in the dry season, and both indices increased slightly from upstream to downstream. The variation in the non-core community was more aggregated from upstream to downstream in the wet season than in the dry season, while the aggregation of the core community was similar between the dry season and the wet season. The proportion of typical freshwater bacterial was significantly higher in the core community than in the non-core community. NO-N was the subset of water chemistry parameters that best explained bacterial community dissimilarities, while 'river length' was the subset of geographic distance parameters that best explained bacterial community dissimilarities. Water chemistry parameters explained more of the variations in the bacterial communities than did geographic distance, especially in the dry season. However, the correlation between water chemistry and bacteria was primarily due to collective allochthonous input (mass effects), not because of any nutritious or toxic effects on bacterial growth competition (species sorting). The greater influence of the mass effects, as compared to species sorting, on bacterial community structure was due to the allochthonous input of bacteria from anthropogenic sources.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Biodiversity
China
DNA, Bacterial
Environmental Monitoring
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Microbiota
Rivers
Seasons
Spatial Analysis
Water Microbiology
Water Pollutants, Chemical

Chemicals

DNA, Bacterial
Water Pollutants, Chemical

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0bacterialcommunityseasonchemistrycorewatergeographicdistancedryeffectsspeciesrivernon-corecommunitieswetparametersexplainedsortingHowevervariationsstructurewellLe'ancompositionsequencingproportionreachesindexsignificantlyhigherupstreamdownstreamsubsetbestdissimilaritiesbacteriadueallochthonousinputmass'Corecommunities'foundconsistentlythroughoutcontinuumpreviouslyidentifiedrelationshipsstudiedsampledentirecourseRiverChinaexploredsiteusingIlluminahigh-throughputsequencereadsassigned~95%uppermiddlegraduallydecreasing90%lowerChao1richnessShannondiversityindicesincreasedslightlyvariationaggregatedaggregationsimilartypicalfreshwaterNO-N'riverlength'WaterespeciallycorrelationprimarilycollectivenutritioustoxicgrowthcompetitiongreaterinfluencecomparedanthropogenicsourcesBacterialshapedanthropogenicallydisturbedCoreHigh-throughputMassSpecies

Similar Articles

Cited By