Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 14 Par: 4 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Variation in Groundwater Microbial Communities in an Unconfined Aquifer Contaminated by Multiple Nitrogen Contamination Sources

Justin G. Morrissy    
Matthew J. Currell    
Suzie M. Reichman    
Aravind Surapaneni    
Mallavarapu Megharaj    
Nicholas D. Crosbie    
Daniel Hirth    
Simon Aquilina    
William Rajendram and Andrew S. Ball    

Resumen

Aquifers provide integral freshwater resources and host ecosystems of largely uncharacterized, truncated endemic microorganisms. In recent history, many aquifers have become increasingly contaminated from various anthropogenic sources. To better understand the impacts of nitrogen contamination on native groundwater ecosystems, 16S rRNA sequencing of the groundwater microbial communities was carried out. Samples were taken from an aquifer known to be contaminated with nitrogen from multiple sources, including fertilizers and wastewater treatment plant effluents. In total, two primary contaminants were identified: NH4+ (<0.1?3.7?26 mg L-1 NH4+ min-median-max), and NO3- (<0.01?18?150 mg L-1 NO3- min-median-max). These contaminants were found to be associated with a decrease/increase in microbial species richness within affected groundwater for NH4+/NO3-, respectively. Important phyla were identified, including Proteobacteria, which had the highest abundance within samples unaffected by NH4+ (36?81% NH4+ unaffected, 4?33% NH4+ affected), and Planctomycetes (0.05?10% NH4+ unaffected, 43?72% NH4+ affected), which had the highest abundance within the NH4+ affected samples, likely due to its ability to perform anaerobic ammonia oxidation (ANAMMOX). Planctomycetes were identified as a potential indicator for the presence of NH4+ contamination. The analysis and characterization of sequencing data alongside physicochemical data showed potential to increase the depth of our understanding of contaminant behavior and fate within a contaminated aquifer using this type of data and analysis.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Livinia Saputra, Sang Hyun Kim, Kyung-Jin Lee, Seo Jin Ki, Ho Young Jo, Seunghak Lee and Jaeshik Chung    
The vadose zone acts as a natural buffer against groundwater contamination, and thus, its attenuation capacity (AC) directly affects groundwater vulnerability to pollutants. A regression model from the previous study predicting the overall AC of soils ag... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Ching-Yi Liu, Yeeping Chia, Po-Yu Chung, Tsai-Ping Lee and Yung-Chia Chiu    
Sustained coseismic changes in groundwater level due to static strain during earthquakes could be considered as an indicator of crustal deformation. These changes usually occur abruptly but recover slowly after earthquakes. High-frequency data indicate a... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Cong Hou, Qingfeng Miao, Haibin Shi, Zhiyuan Hu, Yi Zhao, Cuicui Yu, Yan Yan and Weiying Feng    
Managing soil salinity has always been a difficult problem for agriculture. Balancing water and salt while maintaining crop quality and yield is a key issue for agricultural sustainability. The Hetao lrrigation District in China has a complex mix of cult... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Tian Nan and Wengeng Cao    
Evaluating the effect of ecological water supplement on groundwater restoration quantitatively could produce positive contributions to both water cycle theory and surface?groundwater conjunctive management. Therefore, in this paper, a groundwater flow nu... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Zilalai Abudouwaili, Yuhui Yang and Xiancheng Feng    
The Ili Kashi River Basin is an area with relatively abundant precipitation within the arid region of Northwest China. Using water samples from atmospheric precipitation, surface water, groundwater, and snow meltwater in the basin from July 2018 to June ... ver más
Revista: Water