1. Global diversity and biogeography of bacterial communities in wastewater treatment plants
- Author
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Wu, Linwei, Ning, Daliang, Zhang, Bing, Li, Yong, Zhang, Ping, Shan, Xiaoyu, Zhang, Qiuting, Brown, Mathew, Li, Zhenxin, Van Nostrand, Joy D., Ling, Fangqiong, Xiao, Naijia, Zhang, Ya, Vierheilig, Julia, Wells, George F., Yang, Yunfeng, Deng, Ye, Tu, Qichao, Wang, Aijie, Zhang, Tong, He, Zhili, Keller, Jurg, Nielsen, Per H., Alvarez, Pedro J.J., Criddle, Craig S., Wagner, Michael, Tiedje, James M., He, Qiang, Curtis, Thomas P., Stahl, David A., Alvarez-Cohen, Lisa, Rittmann, Bruce E., Wen, Xianghua, Zhou, Jizhong, Acevedo, Dany, Agullo-Barcelo, Miriam, Andersen, Gary L., de Araujo, Juliana Calabria, Boehnke, Kevin, Bond, Philip, Bott, Charles B., Bovio, Patricia, Brewster, Rebecca K., Bux, Faizal, Cabezas, Angela, Cabrol, Léa, Chen, Si, Etchebehere, Claudia, Ford, Amanda, Frigon, Dominic, Gómez, Janeth Sanabria, Griffin, James S., Gu, April Z., Habagil, Moshe, Hale, Lauren, Hardeman, Steven D., Harmon, Marc, Horn, Harald, Hu, Zhiqiang, Jauffur, Shameem, Johnson, David R., Keucken, Alexander, Kumari, Sheena, Leal, Cintia Dutra, Lebrun, Laura A., Lee, Jangho, Lee, Minjoo, Lee, Zarraz M.P., Li, Mengyan, Li, Xu, Liu, Yu, Luthy, Richard G., Mendonça-Hagler, Leda C., de Menezes, Francisca Gleire Rodriguez, Meyers, Arthur J., Mohebbi, Amin, Oehmen, Adrian, Palmer, Andrew, Parameswaran, Prathap, Park, Joonhong, Patsch, Deborah, Reginatto, Valeria, de los Reyes, Francis L., Noyola, Adalberto, Rossetti, Simona, Sidhu, Jatinder, Sloan, William T., Smith, Kylie, de Sousa, Oscarina Viana, Stephens, Kyle, Tian, Renmao, Tooker, Nicholas B., De los Cobos Vasconcelos, Daniel, Wakelin, Steve, Wang, Bei, Weaver, Joseph E., West, Stephanie, Wilmes, Paul, Woo, Sung Geun, Wu, Jer Horng, University of Oklahoma (OU), Tsinghua University [Beijing] (THU), College of Resource and Environment Southwest University, Newcastle University [Newcastle], Northeastern Normal University, Washington University in Saint Louis (WUSTL), University of Vienna [Vienna], Northwestern University [Evanston], Shandong University, Chinese Academy of Sciences [Beijing] (CAS), The University of Hong Kong (HKU), Sun Yat-Sen University [Guangzhou] (SYSU), University of Queensland [Brisbane], Aalborg University [Denmark] (AAU), Rice University [Houston], Stanford University, Michigan State University System, The University of Tennessee [Knoxville], University of Washington [Seattle], University of California [Berkeley] (UC Berkeley), University of California (UC), Arizona State University [Tempe] (ASU), University of California [Berkeley], and University of California
- Subjects
[SDV.BIO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biotechnology ,Biodiversity ,microbiome ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Global Water Microbiome Consortium ,Wastewater treatment plants ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,activated sludge ,0303 health sciences ,Geography ,Sewage ,Ecology ,[SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering ,Microbiota ,Bacterial ,6. Clean water ,Wastewater ,Medical Microbiology ,Sewage treatment ,Infection ,Sequence Analysis ,Microbiology (medical) ,DNA, Bacterial ,16S ,[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes ,Immunology ,BACTÉRIAS ,Theoretical ecology ,Microbiology ,Water Purification ,03 medical and health sciences ,Microbial ecology ,Genetics ,14. Life underwater ,030304 developmental biology ,Ribosomal ,Bacteria ,030306 microbiology ,Species diversity ,Cell Biology ,DNA ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,bacterial communities ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,Activated sludge ,13. Climate action ,Biological dispersal ,RNA ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology - Abstract
International audience; Microorganisms in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are essential for water purification to protect public and environmental health. However, the diversity of microorganisms and the factors that control it are poorly understood. Using a systematic global-sampling effort, we analysed the 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences from ~1,200 activated sludge samples taken from 269 WWTPs in 23 countries on 6 continents. Our analyses revealed that the global activated sludge bacterial communities contain ~1 billion bacterial phylotypes with a Poisson lognormal diversity distribution. Despite this high diversity, activated sludge has a small, global core bacterial community (n = 28 operational taxonomic units) that is strongly linked to activated sludge performance. Meta-analyses with global datasets associate the activated sludge microbiomes most closely to freshwater populations. In contrast to macroorganism diversity, activated sludge bacterial communities show no latitudinal gradient. Furthermore, their spatial turnover is scale-dependent and appears to be largely driven by stochastic processes (dispersal and drift), although deterministic factors (temperature and organic input) are also important. Our findings enhance our mechanistic understanding of the global diversity and biogeography of activated sludge bacterial communities within a theoretical ecology framework and have important implications for microbial ecology and wastewater treatment processes.
- Published
- 2018
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