| Literature DB >> 28549288 |
Wencheng Wu1, Changxun Dong2, Jiahui Wu3, Xiaowen Liu3, Yingxin Wu3, Xianbin Chen3, Shixiao Yu4.
Abstract
Soil microbes play vital roles in ecosystem functions, and soil microbial communities may be strongly structured by land use patterns associated with electronic waste (e-waste) recycling activities, which can increase the heavy metal concentration in soils. In this study, a suite of soils from five land use types (paddy field, vegetable field, dry field, forest field, and e-waste recycling site) were collected in Longtang Town, Guangdong Province, South China. Soil physicochemical properties and heavy metal concentrations were measured, and the indigenous microbial assemblages were profiled using 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing and clone library analyses. The results showed that mercury concentration was positively correlated with both Faith's PD and Chao1 estimates, suggesting that the soil microbial alpha diversity was predominantly regulated by mercury. In addition, redundancy analysis indicated that available phosphorus, soil moisture, and mercury were the three major drivers affecting the microbial assemblages. Overall, the microbial composition was determined primarily by land use patterns, and this study provides a novel insight on the composition and diversity of microbial communities in soils associated with e-waste recycling activities.Entities:
Keywords: E-waste; High-throughput sequencing; Microbial assemblage; Soil physicochemical property; Trace metal
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28549288 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.05.165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963