Bacterial Community Structure and Function along a Heavy Metal Gradient

  • Dean-Ross D
  • Mills A
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Abstract

The response of the planktonic, sediment, and epilithic bacterial communities to increasing concentrations of heavy metals was determined in a polluted river. None of the communities demonstrated a pollution-related effect on bacterial numbers (viable and total), heterotrophic activity, resistance to Pb or Cu, or species diversity as determined by either the Shannon-Wiener diversity index or rarefaction. The lack of correlation between concentrations of heavy metals and resistance in the sediment bacterial community was investigated and found to be due at least in part to the high pH of the river water and the resultant reduction in heavy metal toxicity. The three different communities demonstrated characteristic profiles based on the relative abundances of bacterial strains grouped according to functional similarities.

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Dean-Ross, D., & Mills, A. L. (1989). Bacterial Community Structure and Function along a Heavy Metal Gradient. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 55(8), 2002–2009. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.55.8.2002-2009.1989

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