4.7 Article

Microbial community composition and glyphosate degraders of two soils under the influence of temperature, total organic carbon and pH

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
卷 297, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.118790

关键词

Glyphosate; Mineralization; pH; TOC; Soil respiration; PLFAs

资金

  1. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research -UFZ
  2. German Research Council (DFG) [980/1-3]
  3. COLCIENCIAS Foundation
  4. DAAD

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Temperature, soil organic carbon (TOC), and pH have significant effects on soil microbial communities and the degradation process of glyphosate.
Glyphosate can be degraded by soil microorganisms rapidly and is impacted by temperature and soil properties. Enhanced temperature and total organic carbon (TOC) as well as reduced pH increased the rate of (C3N)-C-13-N-15-glyphosate conversion to CO2 and biogenic non-extractable residues (bioNERs) in a Haplic Chernozem (Muskus et al., 2019) and in a Humic Cambisol (Muskus et al., 2020). To date; however, the combined effect of temperature and TOC or pH on microbial community composition and glyphosate degraders in these two soils has not been investigated. Phospholipid fatty acid [PLFA] biomarker analysis combined with C-13 labeling was employed to investigate the effect of two soil properties (pH, TOC) and of three temperatures (10 degrees C, 20 degrees C, 30 degrees C) on soil microorganisms. Before incubation, the properties of a Haplic Chernozem and a Humic Cambisol were adjusted to obtain five treatments: (a) Control (Haplic Chernozem: 2.1% TOC and pH 6.6; Humic Cambisol: 3% TOC and pH 7.0), (b) 3% TOC (Haplic Chernozem) or 4% TOC (Humic Cambisol), (c) 4% TOC (Haplic Chernozem) or 5% TOC (Humic Cambisol), (d) pH 6.0 (Haplic Chernozem) or pH 6.5 (Humic Cambisol), and (e) pH 5.5 for both soils. All treatments were amended with 50 mg kg(-1) glyphosate and incubated at 10 degrees C, 20 degrees C or 30 degrees C. We observed an increase in respiration, microbial biomass and glyphosate mineralization with incubation temperature. Although respiration and microbial biomass in the Humic Cambisol was higher, the microorganisms in the Haplic Chernozem were more active in glyphosate degradation. Increased TOC shifted the microbiome and the C-13-glyphosate degraders towards Gram-positive bacteria in both soils. However, the abundance of C-13-PLFAs indicative for the starvation of Gram-negative bacteria increased with increasing TOC or decreasing pH at higher temperatures. Gram-negative bacteria thus may have been involved in earlier stages of glyphosate degradation.

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