Abstract

Emerging organic pollutants (EOPs) in urban rivers have raised concerns regarding their eco-toxicological effects. However, the bacterioplankton community disturbances caused by EOPs in urban rivers and the associated ecological mechanisms remain unclear. This study provided profiles of the spatial distribution of a bacterioplankton community disturbed by human activity along an urban river. The results showed that EOP concentration and composition were differently distributed in residential and industrial areas, which significantly influenced bacterioplankton community structure. Based on redundancy analysis, parabens (methylparaben and propylparaben) were the major factors driving bacterioplankton community changes. Parabens inhibited gram-positive bacteria and promoted oxidative stress-tolerant bacteria in the river ecosystem. Parabens also disturbed ecological processes of bacterioplankton community assembly, shifting from a homogeneous selection (consistent selection pressure under similar environmental condition) to stochastic processes (random changes due to birth, death, immigration, and emigration) with changing in paraben concentrations. Heterogeneous selection was predicted to dominate microbial community assembly with paraben concentration changes exceeding 61.6 ng/L, which could deteriorate the river ecosystem. Furthermore, specific bacterial genera were identified as potential bioindicators to assess the condition of EOP contaminants in the river. Overall, this study highlights significant disturbances in bacterioplankton communities by EOPs at environmental concentrations, and our results could facilitate generation of appropriate management strategies aimed at EOPs in urban rivers.

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