کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5745938 | 1618788 | 2017 | 9 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

- Spatial distribution of vanadium in surface soils in Panzhihua, China, is studied.
- Responses of microbial communities including bacteria and fungi are investigated.
- Organic matter, available P and S have great influences on bacterial structure.
- Bacterial communities converge to similar structure after long-term cultivation.
- Fungal diversities decrease after cultivation with the same most abundant phyla.
Spatial distribution of vanadium in surface soils from different processing stages of vanadium-bearing titanomagnetite in Panzhihua mining and smelting area (China) as well as responses of microbial communities including bacteria and fungi to vanadium were investigated by fieldwork and laboratory incubation experiment. The vanadium contents in this region ranged from 149.3 to 4793.6 mg kgâ1, exceeding the soil background value of vanadium in China (82 mg kgâ1) largely. High-throughput DNA sequencing results showed bacterial communities from different manufacturing locations were quite diverse, but Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria were abundant in all samples. The contents of organic matter, available P, available S and vanadium had great influences on the structures of bacterial communities in soils. Bacterial communities converged to similar structure after long-term (240 d) cultivation with vanadium containing medium, dominating by bacteria which can tolerate or reduce toxicities of heavy metals. Fungal diversities decreased after cultivation, but Ascomycota and Ciliophora were still the most abundant phyla as in the original soil samples. Results in this study emphasize the urgency of investigating vanadium contaminations in soils and provide valuable information on how vanadium contamination influences bacterial and fungal communities.
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Journal: Chemosphere - Volume 183, September 2017, Pages 9-17