scholarly journals Bacterial community tolerance to Cu in soils with geochemical baseline concentrations (GBCs) of heavy metals: Importance for pollution induced community tolerance (PICT) determinations using the leucine incorporation method

2021 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 108157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Campillo-Cora ◽  
Diego Soto-Gómez ◽  
Manuel Arias-Estévez ◽  
Erland Bååth ◽  
David Fernández-Calviño
Author(s):  
Claudia Campillo-Cora ◽  
Diego Soto-Gómez ◽  
Manuel Arias-Estévez ◽  
Erland Bååth ◽  
David Fernández-Calviño

AbstractThe PICT method (pollution-induced community tolerance) can be used to assess whether changes in soil microbial response are due to heavy metal toxicity or not. Microbial community tolerance baseline levels can, however, also change due to variations in soil physicochemical properties. Thirty soil samples (0–20 cm), with geochemical baseline concentrations (GBCs) of heavy metals and from five different parent materials (granite, limestone, schist, amphibolite, and serpentine), were used to estimate baseline levels of bacterial community tolerance to Cr, Ni, Pb, and Zn using the leucine incorporation method. General equations (n = 30) were determined by multiple linear regression using general soil properties and parent material as binary variables, explaining 38% of the variance in log IC50 (concentration that inhibits 50% of bacterial growth) values for Zn, with 36% for Pb, 44% for Cr, and 68% for Ni. The use of individual equations for each parent material increased the explained variance for all heavy metals, but the presence of a low number of samples (n = 6) lead to low robustness. Generally, clay content and dissolved organic C (DOC) were the main variables explaining bacterial community tolerance for the tested heavy metals. Our results suggest that these equations may permit applying the PICT method with Zn and Pb when there are no reference soils, while more data are needed before using this concept for Ni and Cr.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanesa Santás-Miguel ◽  
Avelino Núñez-Delgado ◽  
Esperanza Álvarez-Rodríguez ◽  
Montserrat Díaz-Raviña ◽  
Manuel Arias-Estévez ◽  
...  

Abstract. The widespread use of both heavy metals and antibiotics in livestock farming and their subsequent arrival on agricultural soils through manure/slurry spreading has become a problem of vital importance for human health and the environment. In the current research, a laboratory experiment was carried out for 42 days to study co-selection for tolerance of three tetracycline antibiotics (tetracycline, TC; oxytetracycline, OTC; chlortetracycline, CTC) in soils polluted with heavy metals (As, Cd, Zn, Cu, Ni, Cr and Pb) at high concentration levels (1000 mg kg−1 of each one, separately). Pollution Induced Community Tolerance (PICT) of the bacterial community was estimated using the leucine incorporation technique. The Log IC50 (logarithm of the concentration causing 50 % inhibition in bacterial community growth) values obtained in uncontaminated soil samples for all the heavy metals tested showed the following toxicity sequence: Cu > As > Cr ≥ Pb ≥ Cd > Zn > Ni. However, in polluted soil samples the toxicity sequence was: Cu > Pb ≥ As ≥ Cd ≥ Cr ≥ Ni ≥ Zn. Moreover, at high metal concentrations the bacterial communities show tolerance to the metal itself, this taking place for all the metals tested in the long term. The bacterial communities of the soil polluted with heavy metals showed also long-term co-tolerance to TC, OTC, and CTC. This kind of studies, focusing on the eventual increases of tolerance and co-tolerance of bacterial communities in agricultural soil, favored by the presence of other pollutants, is of crucial importance, mostly bearing in mind that the appearance of antibiotic resistance genes in soil bacteria could be transmitted to human pathogens.


Agronomy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanesa Santás-Miguel ◽  
Manuel Arias-Estévez ◽  
Montserrat Díaz-Raviña ◽  
María José Fernández-Sanjurjo ◽  
Esperanza Álvarez-Rodríguez ◽  
...  

Toxicity on soil bacterial community growth caused by the antibiotics oxytetracycline (OTC) and chlortetracycline (CTC) was studied in 22 agricultural soils after 1, 8 and 42 incubation days. The leucine incorporation method was used with this aim, estimating the concentration of each antibiotic which caused an inhibition of 50% in bacterial community growth (log IC50). For OTC, the mean log IC50 was 2.70, 2.81, 2.84 for each of the three incubation times, while the values were 2.05, 2.22 and 2.47 for CTC, meaning that the magnitude of OTC toxicity was similar over time, whereas it decreased significantly for CTC with incubation time. In addition, results showed that the toxicity on bacterial community growth due to CTC is significantly higher than when due to OTC. Moreover, the toxicity on bacterial community growth due to both antibiotics is dependent on soil properties. Specifically, an increase in soil pH and silt content resulted in higher toxicity of both antibiotics, while increases in total organic carbon and clay contents caused decreases in OTC and CTC toxicities. The results also show that OTC toxicity can be well predicted by means of specific equations, using the values of pH measured in KCl and those of effective cation exchange capacity as input variables. CTC toxicity may be predicted (but with low precision) using pH measured in KCl and total organic carbon. These equations may help to predict the negative effects caused by OTC and CTC on soil bacteria using easily measurable soil parameters.


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