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Linking the response of soil microbial community structure in soils to long-term wastewater irrigation and soil depth.

Authors :
Dang, Qiuling
Tan, Wenbing
Zhao, Xinyu
Li, Dan
Li, Yanping
Yang, Tianxue
Li, Renfei
Zu, Guofeng
Xi, Beidou
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Oct2019, Vol. 688, p26-36. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Irrigation with treated wastewater (TWW) has become a prevailing agricultural practice due to the scarcity of fresh water resources, which may have a significant impact on the microbial communities that are critical to many biogeochemical processes in soils. However, it is unclear whether there are links between soil microbial responses to long-term irrigation with different sources of wastewater and soil depth. Here we assess the influence of treated domestic (DTWW), leather industry (LTWW) and pharmaceutical (PTWW) wastewater on microbial communities in vertical soil profiles using high-throughput sequencing based on 16S rRNA and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) gene profiling. We found that microbial α-diversity in the vertical profiles of soils was significantly influenced by TWW irrigation. Bacteria and fungi in different soil depths showed distinct responses to TWW; irrigation with TWW markedly increased abundance of bacterial OTUs and inhibited abundance of fungal OTUs. β-diversity analysis showed that the effect of TWW irrigation on microbial communities was greater than the effect of soil depth, and microbes in subsurface soil were more sensitive to different sources of irrigation water. We also found that, based on β-diversity analysis, irrigation with treated industrial wastewater, including LTWW and PTWW, had a greater impact on microbial community structures than DTWW. TWW irrigation significantly affected the composition of indigenous soil microbial communities at different depths and might introduce exogenous microbes into the soil environment. Our work explicitly demonstrates the vertical responses of bacterial and fungal communities in soils to irrigation with TWW from different sources, which can provides insights into the microbial-dominated geochemical processes from the perspective of the entire soil profile under the context of wastewater irrigation. Unlabelled Image • Significant effect of treated wastewater (TWW) on microbial diversity, community structure and composition. • TWW exerted positive impact on bacterial abundance of OTUs and negative impact on fungal abundance of OTUs. • Microbial community structures were more markedly affected by industrial TWW irrigations than domestic TWW irrigation. • Effects of TWW irrigation on microbial communities were greater than that caused by soil depth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
688
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
138104162
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.06.138