Journal Article10.1007/S00300-018-2316-3
Effect of temperature on bacterial community in petroleum hydrocarbon-contaminated and uncontaminated Antarctic soil
17
TL;DR: It was showed that hydrocarbon contamination in soil might lead to lower bacterial community stability against environmental perturbation such as temperature variation, potentially suggesting high levels of metabolic plasticity in the studied soil bacterial communities.
read more
Abstract: It is generally accepted that bacterial diversity in a community confers resistance to environmental perturbation. Communities with high bacterial diversity are less likely to be impacted by environmental changes such as warming. As such, hydrocarbon-contaminated Antarctic soil that are typically characterised by low bacterial diversity and highly selective taxonomic composition are expected to be more sensitive to changes in temperature than uncontaminated Antarctic soil. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated the response of bacterial community structure to warming of hydrocarbon-contaminated and uncontaminated soil collected from Casey Station, Windmill Island, East Antarctica by using microcosms incubated at 5, 10 and 15 °C over a period of 12 weeks. Our results showed that shifts occurred in the bacterial community in relation to the incubation temperatures in both the hydrocarbon-contaminated and uncontaminated soil, with a stronger response observed in the contaminated soil. Taxa referred as comprising hydrocarbon-degrading genera such as Rhodococcus, was the most prevalent genus in the contaminated soil after incubation at 15 °C, accounting for approximately 32–50% of the total detected genera. However, there were no significant differences in the selected functional genes, potentially suggesting high levels of metabolic plasticity in the studied soil bacterial communities. Overall, we showed that hydrocarbon contamination in soil might lead to lower bacterial community stability against environmental perturbation such as temperature variation.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Biodiversity increases the resistance of ecosystem productivity to climate extremes
Forest Isbell
- 10 Aug 2016
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from 46 experiments that manipulated grassland plant diversity to test whether biodiversity provides resistance during and resilience after climate events, and found that biodiversity increased ecosystem resilience for a broad range of climate events.
575
Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment: an Update.
John Turner,Nicholas E. Barrand,Thomas J. Bracegirdle,Peter Convey,Dominic A. Hodgson,Martin J. Jarvis,Adrian Jenkins,Gareth J. Marshall,Michael P. Meredith,Howard K. Roscoe,Jon Shanklin,John Anthony French,Hugues Goosse,Mauro Guglielmin,Julian Gutt,Stan Jacobs,Marlon C. Kennicutt Ii,Valérie Masson-Delmotte,Paul Andrew Mayewski,Francisco Navarro,Sharon A. Robinson,Ted Scambos,Michael Sparrow,Colin Summerhayes,Kevin Speer,A. Klepikov +25 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an update of the "key points" from the Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment (ACCE) report that was published by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) in 2009.
324
Diesel in Antarctica and a Bibliometric Study on Its Indigenous Microorganisms as Remediation Agent.
Rasidnie Razin Wong,Zheng Syuen Lim,Noor Azmi Shaharuddin,Azham Zulkharnain,Claudio Gomez-Fuentes,Siti Aqlima Ahmad,Siti Aqlima Ahmad,Siti Aqlima Ahmad +7 more
TL;DR: A review of the collective and past understanding to the current findings of Antarctic microbial enzymatic degradation of hydrocarbons as well as its genotypic adaptation to the extreme low temperature is presented in this paper.
16
Geo-distribution pattern of microbial carbon cycling genes responsive to petroleum contamination in continental horizontal oilfields.
TL;DR: In this study, 77 soil samples were collected from five typical oilfields horizontally located in China to explore the influence of environmental variables and petroleum contamination on microbial carbon cycling genes, and co-occurrence ecological network analysis revealed a more complex interactions of all functional genes in petroleum-contaminated soils.
13
Subsea tunnel reinforced sprayed concrete subjected to deterioration harbours distinct microbial communities
TL;DR: The superficial flow of water over the biofilm had a strong effect on oxygen penetration in the biofilms and was identified as one major environmental gradient that varied between the sites, likely being important for shaping the microbial communities.
References
A new method for non-parametric multivariate analysis of variance
TL;DR: In this article, a non-parametric method for multivariate analysis of variance, based on sums of squared distances, is proposed. But it is not suitable for most ecological multivariate data sets.
Toward an ecological classification of soil bacteria.
TL;DR: Survey, experimental, and meta-analytical results suggest that certain bacterial phyla can be differentiated into copiotrophic and oligotrophic categories that correspond to the r- and K-selected categories used to describe the ecological attributes of plants and animals.
Resistance, resilience, and redundancy in microbial communities
TL;DR: It is found that the composition of most microbial groups is sensitive and not immediately resilient to disturbance, regardless of taxonomic breadth of the group or the type of disturbance, and a simple framework to incorporate microbial community composition into ecosystem process models is proposed.
2.6K
Biodiversity increases the resistance of ecosystem productivity to climate extremes
Forest Isbell,Dylan Craven,John Connolly,M. Loreau,Bernhard Schmid,Carl Beierkuhnlein,T. Martin Bezemer,Catherine L. Bonin,Helge Bruelheide,Enrica De Luca,Anne Ebeling,John N. Griffin,Qinfeng Guo,Yann Hautier,Andy Hector,Anke Jentsch,Jürgen Kreyling,Vojtěch Lanta,Peter Manning,Sebastian T. Meyer,Akira Mori,Shahid Naeem,Pascal A. Niklaus,H. Wayne Polley,Peter B. Reich,Peter B. Reich,Christiane Roscher,Eric W. Seabloom,Melinda D. Smith,Madhav P. Thakur,David Tilman,David Tilman,Benjamin F. Tracy,Wim H. van der Putten,Jasper van Ruijven,Alexandra Weigelt,Wolfgang W. Weisser,Brian J. Wilsey,Nico Eisenhauer +38 more
TL;DR: Biodiversity mainly stabilizes ecosystem productivity, and productivity-dependent ecosystem services, by increasing resistance to climate events, and restoration of biodiversity to increase it, mainly by changing the resistance of ecosystem productivity toClimate events.