TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaption of microbial communities to the hostile environment in the Doce River after the collapse of two iron ore tailing dams
AU - Giongo, Adriana
AU - dos Anjos Borges, Luiz Gustavo
AU - Marconatto, Letícia
AU - de Lara Palhano, Pâmela
AU - Serbent, Maria Pilar
AU - Moreira-Silva, Eduardo
AU - de Abreu Siqueira, Tiago
AU - Martinho, Caroline Thais
AU - Barili, Rosalia
AU - Paz, Lisiê Valéria
AU - Moser, Letícia Isabela
AU - De Marco Veríssimo, Carolina
AU - Ketzer, João Marcelo Medina
AU - Medina-Silva, Renata
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020
PY - 2020/8
Y1 - 2020/8
N2 - In November 2015, two iron ore tailing dams collapsed in the city of Mariana, Brazil. The dams' collapse generated a wave of approximately 50 million m3 of a mixture of mining waste and water. It was a major environmental tragedy in Brazilian history, which damaged rivers, and cities 660 km away in the Doce River basin until it reached the ocean coast. Shortly after the incident, several reports informed that the concentration of metals in the water was above acceptable legal limits under Brazilian laws. Here the microbial communities in samples of water, mud, foam, and rhizosphere of Eichhornia from Doce River were analyzed for 16S and 18S rRNA-based amplicon sequencing, along with microbial isolation, chemical and mineralogical analyses. Samples were collected one month and thirteen months after the collapse. Prokaryotic communities from mud shifted drastically over time (33% Bray-Curtis similarity), while water samples were more similar (63% Bray-Curtis similarity) in the same period. After 12 months, mud samples remained with high levels of heavy metals and a reduction in the diversity of microeukaryotes was detected. Amoebozoans increased in mud samples, reaching 49% of microeukaryote abundance, with Discosea and Lobosa groups being the most abundant. The microbial communities’ structure in mud samples changed adapting to the new environment condition. The characterization of microbial communities and metal-tolerant organisms from such impacted environments is essential for understanding the ecological consequences of massive anthropogenic impacts and strategies for the restoration of contaminated sites such as the Doce River.
AB - In November 2015, two iron ore tailing dams collapsed in the city of Mariana, Brazil. The dams' collapse generated a wave of approximately 50 million m3 of a mixture of mining waste and water. It was a major environmental tragedy in Brazilian history, which damaged rivers, and cities 660 km away in the Doce River basin until it reached the ocean coast. Shortly after the incident, several reports informed that the concentration of metals in the water was above acceptable legal limits under Brazilian laws. Here the microbial communities in samples of water, mud, foam, and rhizosphere of Eichhornia from Doce River were analyzed for 16S and 18S rRNA-based amplicon sequencing, along with microbial isolation, chemical and mineralogical analyses. Samples were collected one month and thirteen months after the collapse. Prokaryotic communities from mud shifted drastically over time (33% Bray-Curtis similarity), while water samples were more similar (63% Bray-Curtis similarity) in the same period. After 12 months, mud samples remained with high levels of heavy metals and a reduction in the diversity of microeukaryotes was detected. Amoebozoans increased in mud samples, reaching 49% of microeukaryote abundance, with Discosea and Lobosa groups being the most abundant. The microbial communities’ structure in mud samples changed adapting to the new environment condition. The characterization of microbial communities and metal-tolerant organisms from such impacted environments is essential for understanding the ecological consequences of massive anthropogenic impacts and strategies for the restoration of contaminated sites such as the Doce River.
KW - Aquatic ecology
KW - Bacteria
KW - Ecosystem change
KW - Environmental impact
KW - High throughput DNA sequencing
KW - Metal tolerance
KW - Microbial ecology
KW - Microbial genomics
KW - Ore mining
KW - Protozoa
KW - Water pollution
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089805192&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e04778
DO - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e04778
M3 - Article
SN - 2405-8440
VL - 6
JO - Heliyon
JF - Heliyon
IS - 8
M1 - e04778
ER -