Abstract

Antimony mining has resulted in considerable pollution to the soil environment. Although studies on antinomy contamination have been conducted, its effects on vertical soil profiles and depth-resolved microbial communities remain unknown. The current study selected three vertical soil profiles (0-2m) from the world's largest antimony mining area to characterize the depth-resolved soil microbiota and investigate the effects of mining contamination on microbial adaptation. Results demonstrated that contaminated soil profiles showed distinct depth-resolved effects when compared to uncontaminated soil profiles. As soil depth increased, the concentrations of antimony and arsenic gradually declined in the contaminated soil profiles. Acidobacteria, Chloroflexi, Proteobacteria and Thaumarchaeota were the most variable phyla from surface to deep soil. The co-occurrence networks were loosely connected in surface soil, but obviously recovered and were well-connected in deep soil. The metagenomic results indicated that microbial metabolic potential also changed with soil depth. Genes encoding C metabolism pathways were negatively correlated with antimony and arsenic concentrations. Abundances of arsenic-related genes were enriched by severe contamination, but reduced with soil depth. Overall, soil depth-resolved characteristics are often many meters deep and such effects affected the indigenous microbial communities, as well as their metabolic potential due to different contaminants along vertical depths.

Highlights

  • Soil microbes play critical roles in the biogeochemical cycling of antimony (Sb) and arsenic (As), and the effects of Sb and As contamination on soil microbiota have been well documented in surface soils (< 0.2 m)

  • Soil depth-resolved characteristics are often many meters deep and their microbial diversity and community structures obviously change along their vertical soil profiles due to different nutrient contents and biomasses

  • The significance of this study is that it further reveals how the microbial communities and microbial physiological traits respond to different soil profiles contaminated by high concentrations of Sb and As

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Summary

Background

Soil microbes play critical roles in the biogeochemical cycling of antimony (Sb) and arsenic (As), and the effects of Sb and As contamination on soil microbiota have been well documented in surface soils (< 0.2 m). Their effects in deep soils remain poorly understood. This study determined the depthresolved effects of Sb and As contamination on the microbial adaptation throughout soil profiles (0–2 m) and compared contaminated soil samples to uncontaminated samples

Results
Conclusions
Results And Discussion
Hans Wedepohl K
11. Filella M
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