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Dynamic changes of bacterial community under the influence of bacterial-feeding nematodes grazing in prometryne contaminated soil

Authors :
Zhou, Jihai
Sun, Xiangwu
Jiao, Jiaguo
Liu, Manqiang
Hu, Feng
Li, Huixin
Source :
Applied Soil Ecology. Feb2013, Vol. 64, p70-76. 7p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Abstract: Microcosm experiments were carried out to study the effects of bacterial-feeding nematodes and prometryne on soil bacterial communities in contaminated soil. Prometryne (5 or 10mgkg−1 dry soil, that is, P5 or P10) and bacterial-feeding nematodes (5 or 10 individuals g−1 dry soil, that is, N5 or N10), singly and in combination (P5N5, P5N10, P10N5, P10N10), were added to a nematode-free soil. An uncontaminated nematode-free soil was studied for comparison (Control). Bacterial-feeding nematode grazing boosted soil enzyme activities in contaminated soils, thus speeding up prometryne degradation. In the initial stage of the experiment, prometryne enhanced the soil enzyme activities too, but served the opposite purpose later. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis indicated that prometryne contamination and nematode grazing over the incubation period exerted an obvious impact on Species richness (S), Shannon–Wiener index (H′) and Evenness (E H ) of soil bacteria, which increased initially, then decreased and increased again later. The cluster analysis of DGGE profiles showed that the similarity of soil bacterial communities in all treatments with indigenous microbes, P5, P5N5, P5N10, P10, P10N5, and P10N10 and the Control was 75%, 44%, 78% and 49% at Day 0, Day 8, Day 18 and Day 30, respectively. Compared to the Control, DGGE profiles displayed a varying characteristic bands pattern in all treatments over the incubation period with certain bands present in the treatments while not in the Control and vice versa, suggesting that bacterial-feeding nematode grazing and prometryne contamination affected soil bacterial communities evidently. Consequently, when added to contaminated soil, bacterial-feeding nematodes can contribute to restoration of contaminated sites by degrading toxic compounds like prometryne through enhanced microbial activity. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09291393
Volume :
64
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied Soil Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
85614319
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2012.11.005