Given the diminished role of biotic interactions in soils of continental Antarctica, abiotic factors are believed to play a dominant role in structuring of microbial communities. However, many ice-free regions remain unexplored, and it is unclear which environmental gradients are primarily responsible for the variations among bacterial communities. In this study, we investigated the soil bacterial community around Terra Nova Bay of Victoria Land by pyrosequencing and determined which environmental variables govern the bacterial community structure at the local scale. Six bacterial phyla, Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Chloroflexi, Cyanobacteria, and Bacteroidetes, were dominant, but their relative abundance varied greatly across locations. Bacterial community structures were affected little by spatial distance, but structured more strongly by site, which was in accordance with the soil physicochemical compositions. At both the phylum and species levels, bacterial community structure was explained primarily by pH and water content, while certain earth elements and trace metals also played important roles in shaping community variation. The higher heterogeneity of the bacterial community structure found at this site indicates how soil bacterial communities have adapted to different compositions of edaphic variables under extreme environmental conditions. Taken together, these findings greatly advance our understanding of the adaption of soil bacterial populations to this harsh environment.
For the removal of nutrients from eutrophic stream water polluted by non-point sources, an artificial aquatic food web (AAFW) system comprising processes of phytoplankton growth and Daphnia magna grazing was developed. The AAFW system was a continuous-flow system constructed with one storage basin of 3 m 3 capacity, one phytoplankton tank of 3 m 3 capacity, and one zooplankton growth chamber of 1.5 m 3 capacity. The system was optimized by setting hydraulic retention time of phytoplankton tank as 3 days and D. magna density as 740-1000 individual l -1 . When the system was operated on eutrophic stream water that was delivering 471 g of total nitrogen (TN) and 29 g of total phosphorus (TP) loadings for 45 days, 250 g (53%) of TN and 16 g (54%) of TP were removed from the water during its passage through the phytoplankton tank. In addition, 64 g (14%) of TN and 4 g (13%) of TP were removed from the water by harvesting zooplankton biomass in the zooplankton growth chamber, resulting in significant overall removal rates of TN (69%), nitrate (78%), TP (73%), and dissolved inorganic phosphorus (94%). While the removal efficiency of the AAFW system is comparable to those of other ecotechnologies such as constructed wetlands, its operation is less limited by the availability of space or seasonal shift of temperature. Therefore, it was concluded that AAFW system is a highly efficient, flexible system for reducing nutrient levels in tributary streams and hence nutrient loading to large aquatic systems receiving the stream water.
In the Narębski Point area of King George Island of Antarctica, ornithogenic soils form on land under Chinstrap and Gentoo Penguin rookeries. The purpose of this study was to compare the bacterial community compositions in the gradient of contamination by penguin feces; mineral soil with no contamination, and soils with medium or high contamination. The discrimination between mineral soils and ornithogenic soils by characterization of physicochemical properties and bacterial communities was notable. Physicochemical analyses of soil properties showed enrichment of carbon and nitrogen in ornithogenic soils. Firmicutes were present abundantly in active ornithogenic soils, Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria in a formerly active one, and several diverse phyla such as Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Acidobacteria in mineral soils. Some predominant species belonging to the Firmicutes and Gammaproteobacteria may play an important role for the mineralization of nutrients in ornithogenic soils. Results of this study indicate that dominant species may play an important role in mineralization of nutrients in these ecosystems.
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