4.6 Article

Distribution of Endocrine Disruptor Chemicals and Bacteria in Saline Petrola Lake (Albacete, SE Spain) Protected Area is Strongly Linked to Land Use

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app10114017

Keywords

Hypersaline lake; endocrine disruptors; GC-MSD; 16 rRNA gene; Sediment microbiota; Bacterial bioremediation

Funding

  1. Spanish government FEDER-Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion y Universidades-Agencia Estatal de Investigacion [CICYT-CGL2017-87216-C4-2-R]
  2. Castilla-La Mancha Regional Government [SBPLY/17/180501/000296L]

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Saline lakes are subject to numerous environmental impacts related to human activities, changing the chemical and biological natural conditions of the ecosystem. Sustainable development depends on the conservation of such delicate saline ecosystems, which may hold distinctive biodiversity. Pollution is one of the major threats to surface water bodies, for example by increasing nutrient contents and organic pollutants, including endocrine disrupting chemicals. Microbially mediated redox processes exert a fundamental control on nutrient turnover and contaminant removal. This study examines the influence of land use on the distribution of endocrine disrupting chemicals as well as on the microbial community composition in lacustrine sediments from Petrola saline Lake (SE Spain). The lake is impacted by anthropogenic activities (agriculture, farming, mining and urban wastewater spills). Applying chemical and molecular tools (sequencing of 16S rRNA gene) showed a clear influence of land use on the chemistry and bacterial abundance of the lake sediments. The sampling points closer to wastewater outflows and mining ponds (2635, 2643 and 2650) showed fewer numbers and types of endocrine disrupting chemicals as well as a smaller number of families in the microbial community. These findings improve our understanding of how land use affects both water chemistry and the abundance of organisms responsible for biogeochemical cycles.

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