| Literature DB >> 26976674 |
Mario Xavier Ruiz-González1, Gábor Árpád Czirják1,2,3, Pierre Genevaux4, Anders Pape Møller5, Timothy Alexander Mousseau6, Philipp Heeb1.
Abstract
Ionizing radiation has been shown to produce negative effects on organisms, although little is known about its ecological and evolutionary effects. As a study model, we isolated bacteria associated with feathers from barn swallows Hirundo rustica from three study areas around Chernobyl differing in background ionizing radiation levels and one control study site in Denmark. Each bacterial community was exposed to four different γ radiation doses ranging from 0.46 to 3.96 kGy to test whether chronic exposure to radiation had selected for resistant bacterial strains. Experimental radiation duration had an increasingly overall negative effect on the survival of all bacterial communities. After exposure to γ radiation, bacteria isolated from the site with intermediate background radiation levels survived better and produced more colonies than the bacterial communities from other study sites with higher or lower background radiation levels. Long-term effects of radiation in natural populations might be an important selective pressure on traits of bacteria that facilitate survival in certain environments. Our findings indicate the importance of further studies to understand the proximate mechanisms acting to buffer the negative effects of ionizing radiation in natural populations.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26976674 PMCID: PMC4792135 DOI: 10.1038/srep22969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Number of Colony Forming Units of bacterial strains obtained from environments with different background radiation exposed to different radiation times (CFUs ± S.E.M.).
Markers for background radiation in the environment are: high (), intermediate (), low (), and control (). Samples not exposed to experimental radiation are plotted as continuous lines and experimentally exposed to radiation values are presented in dashed lines.
Figure 2Population sizes of bacteria isolated from environments with different background radiation intensities exposed to four experimental radiation durations (log arithmetic means of CFUs + 1).
Figure 3Overall survival of bacterial morphotypes grouped in categories based on colony colour or morphology.
Numbers on top of bars represent the morphotypes grouped in each category (n): creamy (), Bacillus mycoides (), orange (), Paenibacillus sp2 (), Paenibacillus lactis (), pink (), white (), and yellow ().