Response of bacterioplankton community structures to hydrological conditions and anthropogenic pollution in contrasting subtropical environments |
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Authors: | Rui Zhang,Stanley C.K. Lau,Jang-Seu Ki,Vengatesen Thiyagarajan,& Pei-Yuan Qian |
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Affiliation: | Coastal Marine Laboratory, Department of Biology, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR, China;;State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China;;Department of Life Science, College of Natural Science, Sangmyung University, South Korea;and;The Swire Institute of Marine Science and Division of Ecology and Biodiversity, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China |
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Abstract: | Bacterioplankton community structures under contrasting subtropical marine environments (Hong Kong waters) were analyzed using 16S rRNA gene denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and subsequent sequencing of predominant bands for samples collected bimonthly from 2004 to 2006 at five stations. Generally, bacterial abundance was significantly higher in the summer than in the winter. The general seasonal variations of the bacterial community structure, as indicated by cluster analysis of the DGGE pattern, were best correlated with temperature at most stations, except for the station close to a sewage discharge outfall, which was best explained by pollution-indicating parameters (e.g. biochemical oxygen demand). Anthropogenic pollutions appear to have affected the presence and the intensity of DGGE bands at the stations receiving discharge of primarily treated sewage. The relative abundance of major bacterial species, calculated by the relative intensity of DGGE bands after PCR amplification, also indicated the effects of hydrological or seasonal variations and sewage discharges. For the first time, a systematic molecular fingerprinting analysis of the bacterioplankton community composition was carried out along the environmental and pollution gradient in a subtropical marine environment, and it suggests that hydrological conditions and anthropogenic pollutions altered the total bacterial community as well as the dominant bacterial groups. |
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Keywords: | bacterioplankton community structure coastal environments hydrological conditions anthropogenic pollution |
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