Published May 19, 2014 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Human and Environmental Impacts on River Sediment Microbial Communities

Description

Sediment microbial communities are responsible for a majority of the metabolic activity in river and stream ecosystems. Understanding the dynamics in community structure and function across freshwater environments will help us to predict how these ecosystems will change in response to human land-use practices. Here we present a spatiotemporal study of sediments in the Tongue River (Montana, USA), comprising six sites along 134 km of river sampled in both spring and fall for two years. Sequencing of 16S rRNA amplicons and shotgun metagenomes revealed that these sediments are the richest (∼65,000 microbial 'species' identified) and most novel (93% of OTUs do not match known microbial diversity) ecosystems analyzed by the Earth Microbiome Project to date, and display more functional diversity than was detected in a recent review of global soil metagenomes. Community structure and functional potential have been significantly altered by anthropogenic drivers, including increased pathogenicity and antibiotic metabolism markers near towns and metabolic signatures of coal and coalbed methane extraction byproducts. The core (OTUs shared across all samples) and the overall microbial community exhibited highly similar structure, and phylogeny was weakly coupled with functional potential. Together, these results suggest that microbial community structure is shaped by environmental drivers and niche filtering, though stochastic assembly processes likely play a role as well. These results indicate that sediment microbial communities are highly complex and sensitive to changes in land use practices.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0097435
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10643

Funding

U.S. Department of Energy
DE-AC02-06CH11357
National Science Foundation
EPSCoR funds
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
NRC-27-10-1124
EPA
STAR Graduate Fellowship

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Biophysical Sciences, Ecology and Evolution, Geophysical Sciences
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology