Water (Jan 2021)

Succession of Microbial Community in a Small Water Body within the Alluvial Aquifer of a Large River

  • Antonija Kulaš,
  • Tamara Marković,
  • Petar Žutinić,
  • Katarina Kajan,
  • Igor Karlović,
  • Sandi Orlić,
  • Emre Keskin,
  • Vilim Filipović,
  • Marija Gligora Udovič

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13020115
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 115

Abstract

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Nitrogen is one of the essential elements limiting growth in aquatic environments. Being primarily of anthropogenic origin, it exerts negative impacts on freshwater ecosystems. The present study was carried out at the nitrate-vulnerable zone within the alluvial aquifer of the large lowland Drava River. The main aim was to investigate the ecosystem’s functionality by characterizing the bacterial and phytoplankton diversity of a small inactive gravel pit by using interdisciplinary approaches. The phytoplankton community was investigated via traditional microscopy analyses and environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding, while the bacterial community was investigated by a molecular approach (eDNA). Variations in the algal and bacterial community structure indicated a strong correlation with nitrogen compounds. Summer samples were characterized by a high abundance of bloom-forming Cyanobacteria. Following the cyanobacterial breakdown in the colder winter period, Bacillariophyceae and Actinobacteriota became dominant groups. Changes in microbial composition indicated a strong correlation between N forms and algal and bacterial communities. According to the nitrogen dynamics in the alluvial aquifer, we emphasize the importance of small water bodies as potential buffer zones to anthropogenic nitrogen pressures and sentinels of the disturbances displayed as algal blooms within larger freshwater systems.

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