TY - JOUR
T1 - Distribution patterns of organic pollutants and microbial processes in marine sediments across a gradient of anthropogenic impact
AU - Zoppini, A.
AU - Ademollo, N.
AU - Patrolecco, L.
AU - Langone, L.
AU - Lungarini, S.
AU - Dellisanti, W.
AU - Amalfitano, S.
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - Marine sediments are part of the hydrological cycle and the ultimate storage compartment of land- derived organic matter, including pollutants. Since relevant microbially-driven processes occurring at benthic level may affect the quality of the overall aquatic system, the necessity for incorporating information about microbial communities functioning for ecosystem modelling is arising. The aim of this field study was to explore the links occurring between sediment contamination patterns by three selected class of organic pollutants (Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, PAHs, Nonylphenols, NPs, Bisphenol A, BPA) and major microbial properties (Prokaryotic Biomass, PB; total living biomass, C-ATP; Prokaryotic C Production rate, PCP; Community Respiration rate, CR) across a gradient of anthropogenic pollution. Sediments were sampled from 34 sites selected along 700 km of the western coastline of the Adriatic Sea. Organic contamination was moderate (PAHs <830 ng g-1; NPs <350ng g-1; BPA <38ng g-1) and decreased southward. The amount of PAHs-associated carbon (C-PAHs) increased significantly with sediment organic carbon (OC), along with microbial functional rates. The negative relation between PCP/CR ratio and OC indicated the shift toward oxidative processes in response to organic pollution and potential toxicity, estimated as Toxic Equivalents (TEQs). Our outcomes showed that sediment organic contamination and benthic microbial processes can be intimately linked, with potential repercussions on CO2 emission rates and C-cycling within the detritus-based trophic web.
AB - Marine sediments are part of the hydrological cycle and the ultimate storage compartment of land- derived organic matter, including pollutants. Since relevant microbially-driven processes occurring at benthic level may affect the quality of the overall aquatic system, the necessity for incorporating information about microbial communities functioning for ecosystem modelling is arising. The aim of this field study was to explore the links occurring between sediment contamination patterns by three selected class of organic pollutants (Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, PAHs, Nonylphenols, NPs, Bisphenol A, BPA) and major microbial properties (Prokaryotic Biomass, PB; total living biomass, C-ATP; Prokaryotic C Production rate, PCP; Community Respiration rate, CR) across a gradient of anthropogenic pollution. Sediments were sampled from 34 sites selected along 700 km of the western coastline of the Adriatic Sea. Organic contamination was moderate (PAHs <830 ng g-1; NPs <350ng g-1; BPA <38ng g-1) and decreased southward. The amount of PAHs-associated carbon (C-PAHs) increased significantly with sediment organic carbon (OC), along with microbial functional rates. The negative relation between PCP/CR ratio and OC indicated the shift toward oxidative processes in response to organic pollution and potential toxicity, estimated as Toxic Equivalents (TEQs). Our outcomes showed that sediment organic contamination and benthic microbial processes can be intimately linked, with potential repercussions on CO2 emission rates and C-cycling within the detritus-based trophic web.
KW - benthos
KW - microbial ecology
KW - Organic pollutants
KW - marine sediments
KW - Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
KW - Nonylphenols
KW - Bisphenol A
KW - Microbial biomass
KW - Prokaryotic C Production
KW - Community respiration
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UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85051749769&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.07.081
DO - 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.07.081
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0269-7491
VL - 242
SP - 1860
EP - 1870
JO - Environmental Pollution
JF - Environmental Pollution
IS - Part B
ER -