Abstract

Bacterial communities are resilient to the environmental changes, yet the effect of long term ecological changes on bacterial communities remain poorly explored. To study the effect of prolonged environmental changes, a 25 m long sediment core was excavated from a paleo beach ridge located on the Cauvery delta, south east coast of India. Geological evidences suggested that the site has experienced multiple marine transgressions and regressions. The three paleosols from Vettaikaraniruppu (VKI) beach ridge, VKI-2 (2.8 m bgl; 3 kybp), VKI-5 (7.2 m bgl; 6 kybp) and VKI-14 (24.5 m bgl; 146 kybp) was chosen for bacterial community analysis based on their formation period. Bacterial community structure of paleosols was reconstructed using V3 hypervariable region of bacterial 16S rDNA targeted Illumina sequencing. The VKI-5 sediment layer which formed under marine environment contained highest bacterial diversity, and the community was a mix up of terrestrial and marine bacterial population. The final community VKI-2 exhibited an approximate structural pattern witnessed in the native bacterial community VKI-14 which formed during marine regression. Furthermore, marine transgression and regression experienced in VKI resulted in the formation of distinct biogeographic patterns.

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