Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4388899 Ecological Engineering 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Natural and artificial saline environments samples were investigated and compared.•Salinity significantly decreased the microbe quantities affecting the community structure.•The shared and core halotolerant and halophilic bacteria were detected in the samples.•The core detected bacteria were SRB, Flavobacterium, Clostridia and Bacilli.•DOC/Cl− predominated the quantities variation of archaea, bacteria, fungi and yeast.

To investigate whether there is a core microbial community of natural and industrial saline environments and to evaluate the effects of salinity on microbial communities, two natural samples and four artificial samples taken from different locations in China were analyzed by constructing 16S rRNA gene cloning libraries. The results showed that natural samples have a significantly higher halotolerant and halophilic bacterial diversity compared to artificial samples. In total, 9 phyla were detected among the samples, but only Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria were commonly shared. The canonical correspondence analysis demonstrated that the community variance correlated strongly with Cl−, DOC, conductivity, and pH. Moreover, the Q-PCR results revealed that salinity influenced the microbial community structure and progressively decreased the populations of bacteria, archaea, fungi and yeast. Variation partitioning analysis illustrated that DOC/Cl− had the greatest contribution to bacterial population variation, revealing a core control factor used for functional resilience in saline wastewater treatment applications.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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