Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4476297 Marine Pollution Bulletin 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Low seasonal variation was observed for chronically hydrocarbon-contaminated mats.•Hydrocarbon contents explained the differences in the microbial community structure.•Hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria are rare or transient in chronically polluted systems.•Obligate hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria should not be good indicators of chronic pollution.

Photosynthetic microbial mats are metabolically structured systems driven by solar light. They are ubiquitous and can grow in hydrocarbon-polluted sites. Our aim is to determine the impact of chronic hydrocarbon contamination on the structure, activity, and functioning of a microbial mat. We compared it to an uncontaminated mat harboring similar geochemical characteristics. The mats were sampled in spring and fall for 2 years. Seasonal variations were observed for the reference mat: sulfur cycle-related bacteria dominated spring samples, while Cyanobacteria dominated in autumn. The contaminated mat showed minor seasonal variation; a progressive increase of Cyanobacteria was noticed, indicating a perturbation of the classical seasonal behavior. Hydrocarbon content was the main factor explaining the differences in the microbial community structure; however, hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria were among rare or transient Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) in the contaminated mat. We suggest that in long-term contaminated systems, hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria cannot be considered a sentinel of contamination.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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