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Global warming during the Last Glacial Termination was interrupted by millennial-scale cool intervals such as the Younger Dryas and the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). Although these events are well characterized at high latitudes, their impacts at low latitudes are less well known. We present high-resolution temperature and hydroclimate records from the tropical Andes spanning the past ~16,800 y using organic geochemical proxies applied to a sediment core from Laguna Llaviucu, Ecuador. Our hydroclimate record aligns with records from the western Amazon and eastern and central Andes and indicates a dominant long-term influence of changing austral summer insolation on the intensity of the South American Summer Monsoon. Our temperature record indicates a ~4 °C warming during the glacial termination, stable temperatures in the early to mid-Holocene, and slight, gradual warming since ~6,000 y ago. Importantly, we observe a ~1.5 °C cold reversal coincident with the ACR. These data document a temperature change pattern during the deglaciation in the tropical Andes that resembles temperatures at high southern latitudes, which are thought to be controlled by radiative forcing from atmospheric greenhouse gases and changes in ocean heat transport by the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.
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Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an ever-present threat to the treatment of infectious diseases. However, the potential relevance of this phenomenon in environmental reservoirs still raises many questions. Detection of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in the environment is a critical aspect for understanding the prevalence of resistance outside of clinical settings, as detection in the environment indicates that resistance is likely already widespread. We isolated antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli from three urban waterbodies over a 15-month time series, determined their antimicrobial susceptibilities, investigated their population structure, and identified genetic determinants of resistance. We found that E. coli populations at each site were composed of different dominant phylotypes and showed distinct patterns of antimicrobial and multidrug resistance, despite close geographic proximity. Many strains that were genome-sequenced belonged to sequence types of international concern, particularly the ST131 clonal complex. We found widespread resistance to clinically important antimicrobials such as amoxicillin, cefotaxime, and ciprofloxacin, but found that all strains were susceptible to amikacin and the last-line antimicrobials meropenem and fosfomycin. Resistance was most often due to acquirable antimicrobial resistance genes, while chromosomal mutations in gyrA, parC, and parE conferred resistance to quinolones. Whole-genome analysis of a subset of strains further revealed the diversity of the population of E. coli present, with a wide array of AMR and virulence genes identified, many of which were present on the chromosome, including blaCTX-M. Finally, we determined that environmental persistence, transmission between sites, most likely mediated by wild birds, and transfer of mobile genetic elements likely contributed significantly to the patterns observed.IMPORTANCEA One Health perspective is crucial to understand the extent of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) globally, and investigation of AMR in the environment has been increasing in recent years. However, most studies have focused on waterways that are directly polluted by sewage, industrial manufacturing, or agricultural activities. Therefore, there remains a lack of knowledge about more natural, less overtly impacted environments. Through phenotypic and genotypic investigation of AMR in Escherichia coli, this study adds to our understanding of the extent and patterns of resistance in these types of environments, including over a time series, and showed that complex biotic and abiotic factors contribute to the patterns observed. Our study further emphasizes the importance of incorporating the surveillance of microbes in freshwater environments in order to better comprehend potential risks for both human and animal health and how the environment may serve as a sentinel for potential future clinical infections.
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Anti-Infecciosos , Infecções por Escherichia coli , Animais , Humanos , Escherichia coli , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Lagos , Infecções por Escherichia coli/microbiologia , Farmacorresistência Bacteriana/genéticaRESUMO
A metagenomic approach was employed to investigate the diversity and distribution of Virulence Factors Genes (VFGs) and Pathogenic Bacteria (PB) in sediment samples collected from highly urbanized cities along the Indian coastline. Among the study locations, Mumbai, Veraval and Paradeep showed a higher abundance of PB, with Vibrio and Pseudomonas as dominant at the genus level, and Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa at the species level. In total, 295 VFGs were detected across all sediment samples, of which 40 VFGs showed a similarity of ≥90 % with the Virulence Database (VFDB) and were focused in this study. Among the virulent proteins, twitching motility protein and flagellar P-ring were found to be prevalent and significantly associated with Vibrio spp., and Pseudomonas spp., indicating potential bacterial pathogenicity. This investigation serves as the basis for future studies and provides insights into the comprehensive taxonomic profiles of PB, VFGs and their associated PB in the coastal sediments of India.
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Bactérias , Cidades , Sedimentos Geológicos , Metagenômica , Fatores de Virulência , Fatores de Virulência/genética , Índia , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/patogenicidade , Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Filogenia , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Vibrio/genética , Vibrio/patogenicidade , Vibrio/classificação , Vibrio/isolamento & purificação , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/genética , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/patogenicidade , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/isolamento & purificação , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/classificaçãoRESUMO
Lakes, as integral social-ecological systems, are hotspots for exploring climatic and anthropogenic impacts, with crucial pathways revealed by continuous sediment records. However, the response of multi-proxies in large shallow lakes to typical abrupt events and sustained drivers since the Anthropocene remains unclear. Here, we explored the driver-identification relationships between multi-proxy peaks and natural and anthropogenic events as well as the attribution of short-term perturbations and long-term pressures. To this end, sediment core records, socio-ecological data, and documented events from official records were integrated into a large shallow lake (Dongting Lake, China). Significant causal cascades and path effects (goodness-of-fit: 0.488; total effect: -1.10; p < .001) were observed among catchment environmental proxies, lake biogenic proxies, and mixed-source proxies. The peak-event identification rate (PEIR) and event-peak driving rate were proposed, and values of 28.57%-46.43% and 50%-81.25% were obtained, respectively. The incomplete accuracy of depicting event perturbations using sediment proxies was caused by various information filters both inside and outside the lake. PEIRs for compound events were 1.41 (±0.72) and 1.09 (±0.46) times greater than those for anthropogenic-dominated and natural-dominated events, respectively. Furthermore, socio-economic activity, hydrologic dynamics, land-use changes, and agriculture exerted significant and persistent pressures, cumulatively contributing 55.3%-80.9% to alterations in sediment proxies. Relatively synergistic or antagonistic trends in temporal contributions of these forces were observed after 2000, which were primarily attributed to the "Grain for Green" project and the Three Gorges Dam. This study represents one of the few investigations to distinguish the driver-response relationship of multiple proxies in large shallow lakes under typical event perturbations and long-term sustained pressures since the Anthropocene. The findings will help policymakers and managers address ecological perturbations triggered by climate change and human activities over long-term periods.
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Sedimentos Geológicos , Lagos , Humanos , Ecossistema , China , Agricultura , Monitoramento AmbientalRESUMO
Warming and eutrophication influence carbon (C) processing in sediments, with implications for the global greenhouse-gas budget. Temperature effects on sedimentary C loss are well understood, but the mechanism of change in turnover through priming with labile organic matter (OM) is not. Evaluating changes in the magnitude of priming as a function of warming, eutrophication, and OM stoichiometry, we incubated sediments with 13 C-labeled fresh organic matter (FOM, algal/cyanobacterial) and simulated future climate scenarios (+4°C and +8°C). We investigated FOM-induced production of CH4 and microbial community changes. C loss was primed by up to 17% in dominantly allochthonous sediments (ranging from 5% to 17%), compared to up to 6% in autochthonous sediments (-9% to 6%), suggesting that refractory OM is more susceptible to priming. The magnitude of priming was dependent on sediment OM stoichiometry (C/N ratio), the ratio of fresh labile OM to microbial biomass (FOM/MB), and temperature. Priming was strongest at 4°C when FOM/MB was below 50%. Addition of FOM was associated with activation and growth of bacterial decomposers, including for example, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, or Fibrobacteres, known for their potential to degrade insoluble and complex structural biopolymers. Using sedimentary C/N > 15 as a threshold, we show that in up to 35% of global lakes, sedimentation is dominated by allochthonous rather than autochthonous material. We then provide first-order estimates showing that, upon increase in phytoplankton biomass in these lakes, priming-enabled degradation of recalcitrant OM will release up to 2.1 Tg C annually, which would otherwise be buried for geological times.
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Cianobactérias , Lagos , Lagos/química , Biomassa , Carbono/química , Fitoplâncton , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Eutrofização , ChinaRESUMO
Sediments underlying marine hypoxic zones are huge sinks of unreacted complex organic matter, where despite acute O2 limitation, obligately aerobic bacteria thrive, and steady depletion of organic carbon takes place within a few meters below the seafloor. However, little knowledge exists about the sustenance and complex carbon degradation potentials of aerobic chemoorganotrophs in these sulfidic ecosystems. We isolated and characterized a number of aerobic bacterial chemoorganoheterotrophs from across a ~ 3 m sediment horizon underlying the perennial hypoxic zone of the eastern Arabian Sea. High levels of sequence correspondence between the isolates' genomes and the habitat's metagenomes and metatranscriptomes illustrated that the strains were widespread and active across the sediment cores explored. The isolates catabolized several complex organic compounds of marine and terrestrial origins in the presence of high or low, but not zero, O2. Some of them could also grow anaerobically on yeast extract or acetate by reducing nitrate and/or nitrite. Fermentation did not support growth, but enabled all the strains to maintain a fraction of their cell populations over prolonged anoxia. Under extreme oligotrophy, limited growth followed by protracted stationary phase was observed for all the isolates at low cell density, amid high or low, but not zero, O2 concentration. While population control and maintenance could be particularly useful for the strains' survival in the critically carbon-depleted layers below the explored sediment depths (core-bottom organic carbon: 0.5-1.0% w/w), metagenomic data suggested that in situ anoxia could be surmounted via potential supplies of cryptic O2 from previously reported sources such as Nitrosopumilus species.
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Ecossistema , Oxigênio , Humanos , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Carbono/metabolismo , Bactérias , HipóxiaRESUMO
Many indicators have been developed to assess the state of benthic communities and identify seabed habitats most at risk from bottom trawling disturbance. However, the large variety of indicators and their development and application under specific geographic areas and management contexts has made it difficult to evaluate their wider utility. We compared the complementarity/uniqueness, sensitivity, and selectivity of 18 benthic indicators to pressure of bottom trawling. Seventeen common datasets with broad regional representation covering a range of pressure gradients from bottom trawling disturbance (n = 14), eutrophication (n = 1), marine pollution (n = 1), and oxygen depletion (n = 1) were used for the comparison. The outcomes of most indicators were correlated to a certain extent with response to bottom trawling disturbance, and two complementary groups of indicators were identified: diversity-based and biological trait-based indicators. Trait-based indicators that quantify the changes in relative abundance of sensitive taxa were most effective in identifying benthic community change in response to bottom trawling disturbance. None of the indicators responded to the trawling pressure gradient in all datasets, and some showed a response that were opposed to the theoretical expectation for some gradients. Indicators that showed clear responses to bottom trawling disturbance also showed clear responses in at least one other pressure gradient, suggesting those indicators are not pressure specific. These results emphasize the importance of selecting several indicators, at least one from each group (diversity and trait-based), to capture the broader signals of change in benthic communities due to bottom trawling activities. Our systematic approach offers the basis from which scientific advisors and/or managers can select suitable combinations of indicators to arrive at a sensitive and comprehensive benthic status assessment.
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Mediterranean high-mountain lakes are being increasingly affected by strong Saharan dust deposition events. However, the ecological impacts of these severe atmospheric episodes remain largely unknown. We examined the effects of a strong Saharan dust intrusion to the Iberian Peninsula in 2022 on the physicochemical parameters and prokaryotic communities in sediments of nine high-mountain lakes of Sierra Nevada (Spain) located above 2800 m.a.s.l and in different orientations (north vs. south). A previous year (2021), with lower Saharan dust deposition with respect to 2022, was used for interannual comparisons. The strong dust deposition to the high-mountain lakes resulted in a significant increase in sediment nutrient availability which was linked to changes in the composition of prokaryotic communities. Decreases in alpha diversity and changes in beta diversity of prokaryotic communities were mainly observed in lakes located in the south compared to the north orientation likely because the former was more affected by the atmospheric dust deposition episode. Dust intrusion to the high-mountain lakes resulted in significant changes in the relative abundance of specific genera involved in important nutrient cycling processes such as phosphate solubilization, nitrogen fixation, nitrification, and denitrification. Saharan dust deposition also increased predicted microbial functionality in all lakes. Our findings show that severe atmospheric dust inputs to remote high-mountain lakes of Sierra Nevada can have significant biogeochemical and biodiversity consequences through changes in nutrient availability and prokaryotic communities in sediments of these freshwater ecosystems. This information contributes to understanding how Mediterranean high-mountain lakes of Sierra Nevada face strong intrusions of Saharan dust and their ecological consequences.
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Bactérias , Biodiversidade , Poeira , Sedimentos Geológicos , Lagos , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Lagos/microbiologia , Lagos/química , Poeira/análise , Espanha , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Microbiota , África do NorteRESUMO
Coastal zones account for 75% of marine methane emissions, despite covering only 15% of the ocean surface area. In these ecosystems, the tight balance between methane production and oxidation in sediments prevents most methane from escaping into seawater. However, anthropogenic activities could disrupt this balance, leading to an increased methane escape from coastal sediments. To quantify and unravel potential mechanisms underlying this disruption, we used a suite of biogeochemical and microbiological analyses to investigate the impact of anthropogenically induced redox shifts on methane cycling in sediments from three sites with contrasting bottom water redox conditions (oxic-hypoxic-euxinic) in the eutrophic Stockholm Archipelago. Our results indicate that the methane production potential increased under hypoxia and euxinia, while anaerobic oxidation of methane was disrupted under euxinia. Experimental, genomic, and biogeochemical data suggest that the virtual disappearance of methane-oxidizing archaea at the euxinic site occurred due to sulfide toxicity. This could explain a near 7-fold increase in the extent of escape of benthic methane at the euxinic site relative to the hypoxic one. In conclusion, these insights reveal how the development of euxinia could disrupt the coastal methane biofilter, potentially leading to increased methane emissions from coastal zones.
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Sedimentos Geológicos , Metano , Oxirredução , Sulfetos , Metano/metabolismo , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Anaerobiose , Água do Mar/química , Eutrofização , Archaea/metabolismoRESUMO
Understanding the environmental fate of organic carbon associated with iron (OC-Fe) is critically important for investigating OC preservation in aquatic systems. Here, we first investigate 13C and 14C isotopes of OC-Fe within grain size-fractionated sediments retrieved from the East China Sea and estimate their sources and reactivities of OC-Fe through isotope-mixing models and thermal pyrolysis approaches in order to reveal the fate of OC-Fe on continental shelves influenced by hydrodynamic processes. Our results show that the OC-Fe proportion in total OC (fOC-Fe) in the sortable silt fractions (20-63 µm) is the highest among three grain size fractions, likely suggesting that hydrodynamics may enhance the iron protection on OC. In addition, Δ14COC-Fe values fall within the range of from -358.73 to -64.03, and both Δ14COC-Fe values and ancient OC-Fe% exhibit strong positive linear relationships with fOC-Fe. This emphasized that the hydrodynamic processes may cause the ancient OC to be tightly associated with Fe, accompanying OC-Fe aging. Our findings shed new light on the preservation of OC-Fe in marginal seas to advance the recognition of carbon "rusty sinks" in seafloor sediments.
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Carbono , Sedimentos Geológicos , Hidrodinâmica , Ferro , Ferro/química , Carbono/química , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , China , Oceanos e MaresRESUMO
Global warming and acidification, induced by a substantial increase in anthropogenic CO2 emissions, are expected to have profound impacts on biogeochemical cycles. However, underlying mechanisms of nitrous oxide (N2O) production in estuarine and coastal sediments remain rarely constrained under warming and acidification. Here, the responses of sediment N2O production pathways to warming and acidification were examined using a series of anoxic incubation experiments. Denitrification and N2O production were largely stimulated by the warming, while N2O production decreased under the acidification as well as the denitrification rate and electron transfer efficiency. Compared to warming alone, the combination of warming and acidification decreased N2O production by 26 ± 4%, which was mainly attributed to the decline of the N2O yield by fungal denitrification. Fungal denitrification was mainly responsible for N2O production under the warming condition, while bacterial denitrification predominated N2O production under the acidification condition. The reduced site preference of N2O under acidification reflects that the dominant pathways of N2O production were likely shifted from fungal to bacterial denitrification. In addition, acidification decreased the diversity and abundance of nirS-type denitrifiers, which were the keystone taxa mediating the low N2O production. Collectively, acidification can decrease sediment N2O yield through shifting the responsible production pathways, partly counteracting the warming-induced increase in N2O emissions, further reducing the positive climate warming feedback loop.
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Bactérias , Desnitrificação , Bactérias/metabolismo , Aquecimento Global , Óxido Nitroso/análise , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , SoloRESUMO
Microplastic mixtures are ubiquitously distributed in global ecosystems and include varying types. However, it remains unknown how microplastic diversity affects the biotic interactions of microbes. Here, we developed novel experiments of 600 microcosms with microplastic diversity ranging from 1 to 6 types and examined ecological networks for microbial communities in lake sediments after 2 months of incubation at 15 and 20 °C. We found that microplastic diversity generally enhanced the complexity of microbial networks at both temperatures, such as increasing network connectance and reducing average path length. This phenomenon was further confirmed by strengthened species interactions toward high microplastic diversity except for the negative interactions at 15 °C. Interestingly, increasing temperatures further exaggerated the effects of microplastic diversity on network structures, resulting in higher network connectivity and species interactions. Consistently, using species extinction simulations, we found that higher microplastic diversity and temperature led to more robust networks, and their effects were additionally and positively mediated by the presence of biodegradable microplastics. Our findings provide the first evidence that increasing microplastic diversity could unexpectedly promote the complexity and stability of microbial networks and that future warming could amplify this effect.
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Microbiota , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Microplásticos , Plásticos , Ecossistema , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análiseRESUMO
Numerous penguins can propagate pathogens with antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) into Antarctica. However, the effects of penguin dissemination on the lake ARGs still have received little attention via guano deposition. Here, we have profiled ARGs in ornithogenic sediments subject to penguin guano (OLS) and nonornithogenic sediments (NOLS) from 16 lakes across Antarctica. A total of 191 ARGs were detected in all sediment samples, with a much higher abundance and diversity in OLS than in NOLS. Surprisingly, highly diverse and abundant ARGs were found in the OLS with a detection frequency of >40% and an absolute abundance of (2.34 × 109)-(4.98 × 109) copies g-1, comparable to those in coastal estuarine sediments and pig farms. The strong correlations of identified resistance genes with penguin guano input amount, environmental factors, mobile genetic elements, and bacterial community, in conjunction with network and redundancy analyses, all indicated that penguins were responsible for the dissemination and high enrichment of ARGs in lake sediments via the guano deposition, which might greatly outweigh local human-activity effects. Our results revealed that ARGs could be carried into lakes across the Antarctica through penguin migration, food chains, and guano deposition, which were closely connected with the widespread pollution of ARGs at the global scale.
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Resistência Microbiana a Medicamentos , Lagos , Spheniscidae , Lagos/microbiologia , Animais , Spheniscidae/genética , Regiões Antárticas , Resistência Microbiana a Medicamentos/genética , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Genes BacterianosRESUMO
Marine permeable sediments are important sites for organic matter turnover in the coastal ocean. However, little is known about their role in trapping dissolved organic matter (DOM). Here, we examined DOM abundance and molecular compositions (9804 formulas identified) in subtidal permeable sediments along a near- to offshore gradient in the German North Sea. With the salinity increasing from 30.1 to 34.6 PSU, the DOM composition in bottom water shifts from relatively higher abundances of aromatic compounds to more highly unsaturated compounds. In the bulk sediment, DOM leached by ultrapure water (UPW) from the solid phase is 54 ± 20 times more abundant than DOM in porewater, with higher H/C ratios and a more terrigenous signature. With 0.5 M HCl, the amount of leached DOM (enriched in aromatic and oxygen-rich compounds) is doubled compared to UPW, mainly due to the dissolution of poorly crystalline Fe phases (e.g., ferrihydrite and Fe monosulfides). This suggests that poorly crystalline Fe phases promote DOM retention in permeable sediments, preferentially terrigenous, and aromatic fractions. Given the intense filtration of seawater through the permeable sediments, we posit that Fe can serve as an important intermediate storage for terrigenous organic matter and potentially accelerate organic matter burial in the coastal ocean.
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Matéria Orgânica Dissolvida , Ferro , Ferro/química , Água do Mar/química , Água , Compostos OrgânicosRESUMO
Assessing the impacts of cumulative anthropogenic disturbances on estuarine ecosystem health is challenging. Using spatially distributed sediments from the Pearl River Estuary (PRE) in southern China, which are significantly influenced by anthropogenic activities, we demonstrated that metagenomics-based surveillance of benthic microbial communities is a robust approach to assess anthropogenic impacts on estuarine benthic ecosystems. Correlational and threshold analyses between microbial compositions and environmental conditions indicated that anthropogenic disturbances in the PRE sediments drove the taxonomic and functional variations in the benthic microbial communities. An ecological community threshold of anthropogenic disturbances was identified, which delineated the PRE sediments into two groups (H and L) with distinct taxa and functional traits. Group H, located nearshore and subjected to a higher level of anthropogenic disturbances, was enriched with pollutant degraders, putative human pathogens, fecal pollution indicators, and functional traits related to stress tolerance. In contrast, Group L, located offshore and subjected to a lower level of anthropogenic disturbances, was enriched with halotolerant and oligotrophic taxa and functional traits related to growth and resource acquisition. The machine learning random forest model identified a number of taxonomic and functional indicators that could differentiate PRE sediments between Groups H and L. The identified ecological community threshold and microbial indicators highlight the utility of metagenomics-based microbial surveillance in assessing the adverse impacts of anthropogenic disturbances in estuarine sediments, which can assist environmental management to better protect ecosystem health.
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Ecossistema , Microbiota , Humanos , Efeitos Antropogênicos , Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Biota , Rios , Estuários , Monitoramento AmbientalRESUMO
Lake sediments play a critical role in organic carbon (OC) conservation. However, the biogeochemical processes of the C cycle in lake ecosystems remain limitedly understood. In this study, Fe fractions and OC fractions, including total OC (TOC) and OC associated with iron oxides (TOCFeO), were measured for sediments from a eutrophic lake in China. The abundance and composition of bacterial communities encoding genes cbbL and cbbM were obtained by using high-throughput sequencing. We found that autochthonous algae with a low C/N ratio together with δ13C values predominantly contributed to the OC burial in sediments rather than terrigenous input. TOCFeO served as an important C sink deposited in the sediments. A significantly positive correlation (r = 0.92, p < 0.001) suggested the remarkable regulation of complexed FeO (Fep) on fixed TOC fractions, and the Fe redox shift triggered the loss of deposited OC. It should be noted that a significant correlation was not found between the absolute abundance of C-associating genera and TOC, as well as TOCFeO, and overlying water. Some rare genera, including Acidovora and Thiobacillus, served as keystone species and had a higher connected degree than the genera with high absolute abundance. These investigations synthetically concluded that the absolute abundance of functional genes did not dominate CO2 fixation into the sediments via photosynthesis catalyzed by the C-associating RuBisCO enzyme. That is, rare genera, together with high-abundance genera, control the C association and fixation in the sediments.
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Ecossistema , Sedimentos Geológicos , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Ciclo do Carbono , Lagos/química , Lagos/microbiologia , Bactérias/genética , China , CarbonoRESUMO
Environmental changes associated with rapid climate change in the Arctic, such as the increased rates of sedimentation from climatic or anthropogenic sources, can enhance the impact of abiotic stressors on coastal ecosystems. High sedimentation rates can be detrimental to nearshore kelp abundance and distribution, possibly due to increased mortality at the spore settlement stage. Spore settlement and viability of the Arctic kelp Laminaria solidungula were examined through a series of lab-based sedimentation experiments. Spores were exposed to increasing sediment loads in three experimental designs simulating different sedimentation scenarios: sediment deposition above settled spores, settlement of spores on sediment-covered substrate, and simultaneous suspension of spores and sediments during settlement. Spore settlement was recorded upon completion of each experiment, and gametophyte abundance was assessed following a growth period with sediments removed to examine short-term spore viability via a gametophyte-to-settled-spore ratio. In all three types of sediment exposure, the addition of sediments caused a 30%-40% reduction in spore settlement relative to a no-sediment control. Spore settlement decreased significantly between the low and high sediment treatments when spores were settled onto sediment-covered substrates. In all experiments, increasing amounts of sediment had no significant effect on spore viability, indicating that spores that had settled under different short-term sediment conditions were viable. Our results indicate that depending on spore-sediment interaction type, higher rates of sedimentation resulting from increased sediment loading could affect L. solidungula spore settlement success with potential impacts on the long-term persistence of a diverse and productive benthic habitat.
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Sedimentos Geológicos , Laminaria , Esporos , Laminaria/fisiologia , Esporos/fisiologia , Regiões Árticas , Kelp/fisiologiaRESUMO
Since the addition of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) to the Stockholm Convention in 2009, it became imperative to reassess the distribution and ecological risk of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in coastal sediments over the past decade as sediment records the history of pollutants from human activities. To achieve this, sediments were collected in 2009 and 2021 from China's coastal regions. Despite the consistent geographical pattern where the highest concentrations of ∑PFAS were found in the Yellow Sea, temporal changes have emerged. During the studied period, ∑PFAS levels experienced an increase in the East China Sea while concurrently witnessing a decrease in the South China Sea. Of significance, emerging PFAS compounds displayed not only rising concentrations but also a broader array, pointing towards their intensified production and utilization within China. Alarmingly, PFOS levels in sediments taken from the East China Sea maintained a consistently high ecological risk status over the last ten years. Significant correlations were found between long-chain PFAS and organic carbon content. Comparisons between datasets from 2009 to 2021 uncovered a shifting ecological risk landscape, with heightened concerns for PFOA in the East China Sea, while PFOS-associated risks appeared to diminish in the South China Sea-potentially reflecting the transition to alternative PFAS chemicals. The research reinforces the importance of continuous monitoring and emphasizes the urgent necessity for deeper exploration into the environmental implications and hazards posed by emerging PFAS.
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Geochemical baselines (GBs) play a crucial role in discerning natural variability from anthropogenic impacts on elemental composition within the environment. However, their applicability in quantifying the contribution of pollution sources to heavy metal contamination in sediments remains understudied. This research aimed to assess the degree of contamination and local pollution source attribution by leveraging geochemical baselines derived from statistical techniques, specifically the relative cumulative frequency (RCF) and 2σ-iterative (2σ-I) methods. In the urban water systems of Ma'anshan City, the major iron ore centre in eastern China, we observed concentration ranges of Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn in 36 sediment samples ranging from 66.89 to 352.08 mg/kg, 22.01 to 133.37 mg/kg, 22.66 to 50.80 mg/kg, 14.66to 264.37 mg/kg and 73.30 to 2707.46 mg/kg, respectively. RCF and 2σ-I techniques yielded similar GBs with no significant differences (p > 0.05). The geo-accumulation index and contamination factor analysis showed a sediment heavy metal accumulation rank of Zn > Pb > Cr > Cu > Ni. The contribution percentage of pollution sources varied with land functional type of watershed. For industry-influenced sediments, the contribution of local sources to Cr, Cu, Pb and Zn was significant, with shares of 43%-88%. Overall, this study highlights the valuable insights provided by GBs for effective management of urban aquatic environments.
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The microorganisms in sediments play a crucial role in biogeochemical cycle processes, and numerous studies have shown that microbial community is closely related to environmental factors. However, the usability of sediment microorganisms to evaluate the eco-environment quality of rural rivers has not been adequately explored. This study investigated the distribution characteristics and response of sediment microorganisms to environmental parameters and benthic organisms. Based on the environmental parameters and benthic community indices, the 12 stations were divided into high-polluted group A, moderate-polluted group B and low-polluted group C. Station DG01 and DG02 in group A had the highest level of As and Ni pollution and nutrient concentration, and DG09 in group A had the lowest benthic diversity. Correspondingly, group A had the lowest abundance of Proteobacteria, which has a higher requirement for the environment than Planctomycetes. Group B had the highest sulfide level (97.45 mg/kg), and bacteria (Thiobacillus, Sulfurisoma and Sulfuritalea) with genes involved in sulfur cycling were more enriched in this group. Group C had the lowest level of total nitrogen (243.36 mg/kg), and Rhodanobacteraceae in Xanthomonadales might be a key bioindicator for low nitrogen. In addition, Chlorophyta was found to be more susceptible to heavy metals, and moreover co-occurrence networks showed that microeukaryotes were more sensitive to heavy metal pollution compared to benthic animals and prokaryotes. Therefore, this study suggested that benthic microorganisms especially microeukaryotes could be used as good indicators for evaluating the eco-environmental quality of rural rivers.