Water periods impact the structure and metabolic potential of the nitrogen-cycling microbial communities in rivers of arid and semi-arid regions.
Qingqing PangGuohua ZhaoDan WangXiang ZhuLei XieDezhi ZuoLongmian WangLinfeng TianFuquan PengBin XuFei HeJing DingWenhai ChuPublished in: Water research (2024)
This study examined the influence of water periods on river nitrogen cycling by analysing nitrogen functional genes and bacterial communities in the Qingshui River, an upstream tributary of the Yellow River in China. Nitrate nitrogen predominated as inorganic nitrogen during the low-flow seasons, whereas salinity was highest during the high-flow seasons. Overall, the functional gene abundance increased with decreasing water volume, and nitrogen concentrations were determined by various specific gene groups. The relative abundance of bacteria carrying these genes varied significantly across water periods. The abundance of Pseudomona, Hydrogenophaga (carrying narGHI and nirB genes), and Flavobacterium (carrying nirK, norBC, and nosZ genes) significantly increased during the low-flow seasons. Nitrogen transformation bacteria exhibited both symbiotic and mutualistic relationships. Microbial network nodes and sizes decreased with decreasing water volume, whereas modularity increased. Additionally, the water period affected the functional microbial community structure by influencing specific environmental factors. Among them, SO 4 2- primarily determined the denitrification, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium, and assimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium communities, whereas NO 2 - -N and Mg 2+ were the main driving factors for the nitrogen-fixing and nitrifying communities, respectively. These findings have substantial implications for better understanding the reduction in river nitrogen loads in arid and semi-arid regions during different water periods.