Abstract

During decay, the sediment microenvironment and water quality are severely affected by excessive proliferation of harmful algae such as filamentous green algae (FGA). The frequency of this FGA is increased through global warming and water eutrophication. In the present study, the degradation processes of a common advantage FGA Cladophora oligoclora and its effect on nitrogen and phosphorus nutrient structure and bacterial community composition at the sediment-water interface were investigated by stable isotope labelling and high-throughput sequencing. The results showed that the decomposition process of C. oligoclona was fast, stable, and difficult to degrade. The changes in sediment δ15N values reached 66.68 ‰ on day 40, which indicated that some of the nitrogen had migrated to the sediment from C. oligoclona litter. TN and NH4+-N in the overlying water rapidly increased between days 0–10, NH4+-N rose to 78.21% of TN on day 40, resulting in severe pollution of ammonia in the overlying water. The nitrogen forms and contents in the sediment are mainly derived from the increasing ammonia nitrogen release. The TP and IP in the overlying water increased to the highest concentrations of 6.68±0.64, 6.59±0.79 mg·L−1 during the decomposition process, respectively, resulting in the migration of phosphate to the sediments with increasing phosphorus content. The abundance of the main dominant bacterial communities, such as Acinetobacter (0.08%–62.48%) and Pseudomonas (0.13%–20.36%) in sediments and overlying water has changed significantly. The correlation analysis results suggested that the phosphorus was mainly related to the bacterial community in the overlying water, while the various forms of nitrogen demonstrated a high relevance with the bacterial community in the sediment. Our research results will be valuable in evaluating the potential ecological risk of FGA decomposition and provide scientific support for shallow lake management and submerged vegetation restoration.

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