| Literature DB >> 26089816 |
Catherine M Febria1, Jacob D Hosen2, Byron C Crump3, Margaret A Palmer4, D Dudley Williams5.
Abstract
Microbial communities are responsible for the bulk of biogeochemical processing in temporary headwater streams, yet there is still relatively little known about how community structure and function respond to periodic drying. Moreover, the ability to sample temporary habitats can be a logistical challenge due to the limited capability to measure and predict the timing, intensity and frequency of wet-dry events. Unsurprisingly, published datasets on microbial community structure and function are limited in scope and temporal resolution and vary widely in the molecular methods applied. We compared environmental and microbial community datasets for permanent and temporary tributaries of two different North American headwater stream systems: Speed River (Ontario, Canada) and Parkers Creek (Maryland, USA). We explored whether taxonomic diversity and community composition were altered as a result of flow permanence and compared community composition amongst streams using different 16S microbial community methods (i.e., T-RFLP and Illumina MiSeq). Contrary to our hypotheses, and irrespective of method, community composition did not respond strongly to drying. In both systems, community composition was related to site rather than drying condition. Additional network analysis on the Parkers Creek dataset indicated a shift in the central microbial relationships between temporary and permanent streams. In the permanent stream at Parkers Creek, associations of methanotrophic taxa were most dominant, whereas associations with taxa from the order Nitrospirales were more dominant in the temporary stream, particularly during dry conditions. We compared these results with existing published studies from around the world and found a wide range in community responses to drying. We conclude by proposing three hypotheses that may address contradictory results and, when tested across systems, may expand understanding of the responses of microbial communities in temporary streams to natural and human-induced fluctuations in flow-status and permanence.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial diversity; microbial ecology; operational taxonomic unit (OTU); temporary streams
Year: 2015 PMID: 26089816 PMCID: PMC4454877 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Location map of the two study systems: Speed River (Ontario, Canada) and Parkers Creek (Maryland, USA). See Hosen et al. (2014) and Febria et al. (2010, 2012) for detailed maps of Parkers Creek and Speed River sites, respectively.
Figure 2Ordination of the first two axes of the principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) of microbial community composition Bray-Curtis distances for the Speed River sites. Indicated are communities from multiple dates at the permanent stream, temporary stream, and watershed soils. Points closer together in the plots indicate similar community composition than that those farther apart. Variance explained in PCoA Axis 1 = 22.1% and PCoA Axis 2 = 12.6%.
Figure 3Venn diagram describing overlap in OTUs in the complete dataset.
Figure 4Class level microbial taxonomic composition of sediment samples. The 10 most abundant classes are identified in the legend.
Figure 5Principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) of microbial community composition Bray-Curtis distances between samples based on OTU tables. Points individual microbial sediment or water column samples. Arrows indicate temporal relationship between samples (April 2012, August 2012, and November 2012).
Figure 6A venn diagram of sediment OTUs collected from sites T1, P1, and P2 on August and November 2012.
Figure 7Results of network analysis conducted on temporary and permanent stream samples. Nodes represent individual OTUs and edges represent significant spearman correlations (ρ > 0.75 and p < 0.05). Node size is determined by weight of that node (i.e., the number of edges connected). Nodes are color-coded according to (A) class and (B) the site type for which that OTU is most abundant.
Parkers Creek PCoA loadings of principal coordinate axis 1 and principal coordinate axis 2 for the taxa with greatest loadings from PCoA displayed in Figure .
| Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Betaproteobacteria; Burkholderiales; Comamonadaceae | 2.2383 | −1.4288 | Family |
| Bacteria;Proteobacteria; Betaproteobacteria; Nitrosomonadales; Gallionellaceae | 1.1895 | 0.7054 | Iron-oxidizing bacteria commonly found in streams (Hedrich et al., |
| Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Betaproteobacteria; Burkholderiales; Burkholderiaceae | 0.8038 | −0.6179 | Found with increasing depth in soils (Sait et al., |
| Bacteria; Actinobacteria; Actinobacteria; Frankiales; Sporichthyaceae | 0.7306 | −0.4518 | Slow growing taxa associated with compost (Normand, |
| Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; Xanthomonadales; Sinobacteraceae | −0.7111 | −0.0170 | Includes non-motile gram-negative taxa obtained from polluted soils (Zhou et al., |
| Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Epsilonproteobacteria; Campylobacterales; Helicobacteraceae | 0.4602 | 0.5021 | Includes potential anaerobic, nitrate-reducing taxa found in the Baltic Sea (Labrenz et al., |
| Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; Methylococcales; CABC2E06 | 0.6389 | 0.1747 | Includes type 1 methanotroph taxa that have been found in association with iron-oxidizing bacterial communities in riparian wetlands (Wang et al., |
The network OTUs identified with greatest centrality as defined by closeness, centrality, and node degree.
| OTU_48437 | 0.12 | 937 | 22 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Burkholderiales|Comamonadaceae |
| OTU_00078 | 0.127 | 67.4 | 30 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Crenotrichaceae|Crenothrix |
| OTU_00100 | 0.132 | 811.8 | 30 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Nitrosomonadales|Nitrosomonadaceae|Unclassified |
| OTU_53454 | 0.129 | 2385.5 | 5 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Crenotrichaceae|Crenothrix |
| OTU_01066 | 0.132 | 820 | 31 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Methylococcaceae|Methylosoma |
| OTU_61953 | 0.132 | 811.8 | 30 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Crenotrichaceae|Crenothrix |
| OTU_00141 | 0.127 | 106.9 | 32 | Perennial | Bacteroidetes|Sphingobacteriia|Sphingobacteriales|Chitinophagaceae|Terrimonas |
| OTU_35775 | 0.129 | 1029.8 | 4 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Crenotrichaceae|Crenothrix |
| OTU_00011 | 0.127 | 221.2 | 32 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Methylophilales|Methylophilaceae |
| OTU_00005 | 0.128 | 175.5 | 30 | Perennial | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Methylococcales|Crenotrichaceae|Crenothrix |
| OTU_12554 | 0.103 | 320 | 4 | Temporary (flowing) | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Rhodocyclales|Rhodocyclaceae |
| OTU_00297 | 0.11 | 131.4 | 11 | Temporary (flowing) | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Nitrosomonadales|Gallionellaceae |
| OTU_00249 | 0.108 | 281 | 16 | Temporary (flowing) | Spirochaetes|Spirochaetes|Spirochaetales|Spirochaetaceae|Spirochaeta |
| OTU_01068 | 0.104 | 34.1 | 6 | Temporary (flowing) | Proteobacteria|Betaproteobacteria|Burkholderiales|Comamonadaceae |
| OTU_00010 | 0.105 | 237.2 | 8 | Temporary (flowing) | Proteobacteria|Alphaproteobacteria|Rhizobiales|Bradyrhizobiaceae |
| OTU_00153 | 0.113 | 581.3 | 21 | Temporary (dry) | Proteobacteria|Alphaproteobacteria|Rhizobiales|Xanthobacteraceae|Unclassified |
| OTU_08430 | 0.12 | 494.2 | 15 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|4-29|Unclassified |
| OTU_00396 | 0.117 | 450.7 | 22 | Temporary (dry) | Bacteroidetes|Sphingobacteriia|Sphingobacteriales|Saprospiraceae|Unclassified |
| OTU_00090 | 0.113 | 256.6 | 20 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|Nitrospiraceae|Unclassified |
| OTU_00178 | 0.12 | 494.2 | 15 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|Nitrospiraceae|Unclassified |
| OTU_10024 | 0.111 | 469.7 | 11 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|4-29|Unclassified |
| OTU_00124 | 0.117 | 450.7 | 22 | Temporary (dry) | Proteobacteria|Deltaproteobacteria|Syntrophobacterales|Syntrophaceae|Syntrophus |
| OTU_00056 | 0.118 | 822.4 | 11 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|4-29|Unclassified |
| OTU_00240 | 0.119 | 296.6 | 14 | Temporary (dry) | Nitrospirae|Nitrospira|Nitrospirales|Nitrospiraceae|Nitrospira |
| OTU_00087 | 0.12 | 494.2 | 15 | Temporary (dry) | Proteobacteria|Gammaproteobacteria|Xanthomonadales|Sinobacteraceae|Unclassified |
The site type at which the sequences abundance of a given OTU is greatest is also identified.
Figure 8A heatmap of OTUs presented in Table . OTUs are color-coded as in Figure 7B to indicate whether they are most common in permanent (blue), wet temporary (green), or dry temporary (red) samples. Samples are also color coded using the same scheme.
A summary of microbial community compositional and functional studies on temporary streams and general relationships established.
| Amalfitano et al., | Mulargia River (Sardinia, Italy), River Krathis (Peloponnesus, Greece), River Pariela (Portugal), River Tagliamento (Italy). | Bacterial abundance and biomass: DAPI; Community composition: Fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH), Automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (ARISA). | Bacterial production ([3-H]leucine incorporation). | Probes: ARCH915, EUB338, EUB338-II, ALF1b, BET42a, GASM42a, PLA46a, CF319a, HGC69a, LGC354abc. | Following experimental desiccation, bacterial carbon production and biomass decreased strongly. Limited change in community structure with increase in Alphaproteobacteria and Betaproteobacteria with drying. |
| Frossard et al., | Terrestrial soils, ephemeral and permanent stream channel sites in the Chicken Creek watershed (Germany). | Community composition: Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). | Extracellular enzyme activity: Phosphatase, β-glucosidase, β-xylosidase, cellobiohydrolase, chitinase, leucine-aminopeptidase, aspartate-aminopeptidase, glutamate-aminopeptidase, phenol oxidase, phenol perioxidase. | Primers: Eub338f/Eub518r | Bacterial community structure did not show differences between permanent and ephemeral stream sediments. Enzyme activity was seasonally variable but was not related to microbial community composition. |
| Febria et al., | In-stream colonization corers at 1 permanent and 1 temporary headwater stream (Ontario, Canada). | Community composition: 16S T-RFLP. | Primers: 27F/1492R. | Strong temporal differences in hyporheic porewater community structure both before and after a drying event | |
| Fierer et al., | Soils from Sedgwick Ranch Natural Reserve (Santa Ynez, CA, USA). | Community composition: 16S terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP). | Primers: 8 F hex/1389R. | During experimental drying/wetting cycles community composition was varied by environment. Soils without less history of moisture stress, but not in soils with a history of moisture stress. | |
| Frossard et al., | Succession of microbial community in flumes filled with dry stream bed sediments from the Chicken Creek watershed (Germany). | Community composition: ARISA | Extracellular enzyme activity: Phosphatase, β-glucosidase, β-xylosidase, cellobiohydrolase, chitinase, leucine-aminopeptidase, aspartate-aminopeptidase, glutamate-aminopeptidase, phenol oxidase, phenol perioxidase. | Primers: 1406F-FAM/23Sr. | Strong temporal differences in community structure during succession experiments. Enzyme activity changes were linked to shifts in microbial community structure. |
| Manis et al., | Survey of known temporary streams in agricultural landscapes (USA). | Community composition: 16S and nosZ T-RFLP and 16S and nosZ quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Community abundance: DAPI fluorescence microscopy. | Dentrification enzyme assays. | 16S T-RFLP Primers: Eub338F-0-III, Eub338F-I-II/1392R. 16S qPCR Primers: Eub339, Eub339 II/ Eub518. nosZ T-RFLP Primers: nosZ-F-1181/nosZR. nosZ qPCR: nosZ1F/nosZ2R. | Greater denitrification rates were observed in ephemeral vs. perennial channels, but potential denitrification was not correlated to denitrifier abundance. |
| McIntyre et al., | Barnett Creek (Pilbara region, Western Australia). Ephemeral stream located in lowland floodplain. | Microbial biomass: phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis. | Carbon mineralization assay; carbon dioxide flux assay; carbon and nitrogen stable isotopes. | Landscape position (e.g., riparian soils, floodplain soils, and channel sediments) was less important to microbial activity than soil saturation once water content was greater than 40%. Mineralization of carbon and nitrogen occurs more slowly following complete saturation of sediments compared to brief events that rapidly stimulate microbial activity. | |
| Rees et al., | Semi-permanent stream near Binalong, New South Wales, Australia | Community composition:16S T-RFLP. | Primers: 27F/1492R. | Community composition varied by hydrological condition and within riffles. Communities were changed after drying and did not recover to pre-drought conditions one month after flow was restored. | |
| Timoner et al., | Dam Creek (South-East Queensland, Australia). First order intermittent headwater stream. | Bacterial abundance: fluorescence microscopy. | Microbial carbon degradation: BiologEcoPlates. | Before re-wetting biofilms differed based on time since drying. Rewetting rapidly increased biofilm functional diversity and functional patterns became more similar across sites. Low counts of bacteria were found in both wet and dry isolated pools in an intermittent channel. | |
| Timoner et al., | Fuirosos temporary stream (Spain). | Community composition: 16S pyrosequencing. | Primers: 28F/519R. | Differences between biofilm, shallow streambed hyporheic bacterial communities related to flow, drying stress/desiccation and sediment type. | |
| Timoner et al., | Fuirosos (Iberian Peninsula, Spain). Third order temporary stream. | Community structure and abundance: Chlorophyll-a concentration, pigment composition. | Chlorophyll-a concentrations went down in response to drying but quickly returned following re-wetting. Tendency toward production of protective carotenoids and desiccation resistance structures (e.g., increased membrane thickness and spore production) during drying. | ||
| Zeglin et al., | Onyx River (McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica); Rio Salado (New Mexico, USA). Both ephemeral desert streams. | Community composition: DGGE, Clone library analysis. | Primers: 8F/1391R or 1492R. 519R, 515F, 1100R, and 1492R. | Bacterial diversity at both sites was not correlated with sediment water content but was instead most strongly related to conductivity. Community composition was strongly related to water content. | |
| Zoppini et al., | Mulargia River (Sardinia, Italy). Second-order temporary river. | Bacterial abundance/community composition: FISH, DAPI fluorescence microscopy. | Bacterial production ([3-H]leucine incorporation); extracellular enzyme activity. | Probes: EUB338, EUB338-II, EUB338-III, ALF968, BET42a, GAM42a, CF319a, PLA46a, and LGC354abc. | Metrics including bacterial cell counts, bacterial productivity, and enzyme activity were largely comparable during wet and dry conditions. Community composition was not substantially different between wet and dry conditions. Enzyme activities increased during flooding event. |
| Febria et al. (This study) | Speed River system, Ontario, Canada. | Community composition: 16S T-RFLP. | Primers: 27F/1492R. | Similar community composition in sediment between sites, highly varied surface water communities. | |
| Febria et al. (This study) | Parkers Creek system, Maryland, USA. | Community composition: 16S Illumina MiSeq. | Primers: 515F/806R. | Community composition similar by site. Seasonal changes in microbial community composition were not linked to flow status. |