Relevance of the microbial community to Sb and As biogeochemical cycling in natural wetlands.

2021 
Mining activities lead to elevated levels of antimony (Sb) and arsenic (As) in river systems, having adverse effects on the aquatic environment and human health. Microbes inhabiting river sediment can mediate the transformation of Sb and As, thus changing the toxicity and mobility of Sb and As. Compared to river sediments, natural wetlands could introduce distinct geochemical conditions, leading to the formation of different sedimentary microbial compositions between river sediments and wetland sediments. However, whether such changes in microbial composition could influence the microbially mediated geochemical behavior of Sb or As remains poorly understood. In this study, we collected samples from a river contaminated by Sb tailings and a downstream natural wetland to study the influence of microorganisms on the geochemical behavior of Sb and As after the Sb/As-contaminated river entered the natural wetland. We found that the microbial compositions in the natural wetland soil differed from those in the river sediment. The Sb/As contaminant components (Sb(III), As(III), As(V), Asexe) and nutrients (TC) were important determinants of the difference in the compositions of the microbial communities in the two environments. Taxonomic groups were differentially enriched between the river sediment and wetland soil. For example, the taxonomic groups Xanthomonadales, Clostridiales and Desulfuromonadales were important in the wetland and were likely to involve in Sb/As reduction, sulfate reduction and Fe(III) reduction, whereas Burkholderiales, Desulfobacterales, Hydrogenophilales and Rhodocyclales were important taxonomic groups in the river sediments and were reported to involve in Sb/As oxidation and sulfide oxidation. Our results suggest that microorganisms in both river sediments and natural wetlands can affect the geochemical behavior of Sb/As, but the mechanisms of action are different.
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