Bacterial Diversity in a Dynamic and Extreme Sub-Arctic Watercourse (Pasvik River, Norwegian Arctic)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Microbial communities promptly respond to the environmental perturbations, especially
in the Arctic and sub-Arctic systems that are highly impacted by climate change, and fluctuations
in the diversity level of microbial assemblages could give insights on their expected response. 16S
rRNA gene amplicon sequencing was applied to describe the bacterial community composition in
water and sediment through the sub-Arctic Pasvik River. Our results showed that river water and
sediment harbored distinct communities in terms of diversity and composition at genus level. The
distribution of the bacterial communities was mainly affected by both salinity and temperature in
sediment samples, and by oxygen in water samples. Glacial meltwaters and runoff waters from
melting ice probably influenced the composition of the bacterial community at upper and middle
river sites. Interestingly, marine-derived bacteria consistently accounted for a small proportion of
the total sequences and were also more prominent in the inner part of the river. Results evidenced
that particular conditions occurring at sampling sites (such as algal blooms, heavy metal
contamination and anaerobiosis) may select species at local scale from a shared bacterial pool, thus
favoring certain bacterial taxa. Conversely, the few phylotypes specifically detected in some sites
are probably due to localized external inputs introducing allochthonous microbial groups.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
bacterial diversity; NGS; river sediment and water; sub-Arctic system
Elenco autori:
LO GIUDICE, Angelina
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