Back to Search Start Over

Legacy metal contamination is reflected in the fish gut microbiome in an urbanised estuary

Authors :
Alessandra L. Suzzi
Michael Stat
Geoff R. MacFarlane
Justin R. Seymour
Nathan LR. Williams
Troy F. Gaston
Md Rushna Alam
Megan J. Huggett
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Estuaries are critical habitats subject to a range of stressors requiring effective management. Microbes are gaining recognition as effective environmental indicators, however, the response of host associated communities to stressors remains poorly understood. We examined microbial communities from seawater, sediments and the estuarine fish Pelates sexlineatus, in Australia's largest urbanised estuary, and hypothesised that anthropogenic contamination would be reflected in the microbiology of these sample types. The human faecal markers Lachno3 and HF183 were not detected, indicating negligible influence of sewage, but a gradient in copy numbers of the class 1 integron (intI-1), which is often used as a marker for anthropogenic contamination, was observed in sediments and positively correlated with metal concentrations. While seawater communities were not strongly driven by metal contamination, shifts in the diversity and composition of the fish gut microbiome were observed, with statistical links to levels of metal contamination (F2, 21 = 1.536, p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....604926b187db0eecd6df64a3c45764fc