Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the response of sediment microbial communities (including bacteria and archaeal groups) in Caohai Lake to anthropogenic activities. The sediment samples were collected from the regions with high anthropogenic interference and low anthropogenic interference. Their physicochemical properties and enzyme activities were analyzed, and the bacterial and archaeal communities were investigated using high-throughput sequencing technology. The results showed that the physicochemical characters changed by anthropogenic activities were the important factors that influenced enzyme activities, alpha diversity, key functional taxa, and community structure. And the impact of anthropogenic activities on microbial communities might follow a non-linear pattern. Furthermore, few significant differences of alpha indices between the high and low disturbed areas, but clear differences of microbial community composition analysis and beta-diversity analysis were observed. The hypothesis was proved that the intensity of anthropogenic impacts in Caohai had not reached the potential thresholds. The best distinguish biomarkers between the two areas and the most related key nodes among the network did not always have a high microbial abundance. The anthropogenic activities might influence the microbial community by affecting a small number of the key taxon in the ecological network. These findings provided a valuable understanding of how sediment microorganisms respond to anthropogenic activities in Caohai Lake.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call