51 research outputs found
Peatland Microbial Communities as Indicators of the Extreme Atmospheric Dust Deposition
We investigated a peat profile from the Izery
Mountains, located within the so-called Black Triangle,
the border area of Poland, Czech Republic, and Germany.
This peatland suffered from an extreme atmospheric
pollution during the last 50 years, which created an
exceptional natural experiment to examine the impact
of pollution on peatland microbes. Testate amoebae
(TA), Centropyxis aerophila and Phryganella
acropodia, were distinguished as a proxy of atmospheric
pollution caused by extensive brown coal combustion.
We recorded a decline of mixotrophic TA and
development of agglutinated taxa as a response for the
extreme concentration of Al (30 g kg−1) and Cu
(96 mg kg−1) as well as the extreme amount of fly ash
particles determined by scanning electron microscopy
(SEM) analysis, which were used by TA for shell construction.
Titanium (5.9 %), aluminum (4.7 %), and
chromium (4.2 %) significantly explained the highest
percentage of the variance in TA data. Elements such as
Al, Ti, Cr, Ni, and Cu were highly correlated (r>0.7,
p<0.01) with pseudostome position/body size ratio
and pseudostome position. Changes in the community
structure, functional diversity, and mechanisms of
shell construction were recognized as the indicators
of dust pollution. We strengthen the importance of the
TA as the bioindicators of the recent atmospheric
pollution
- …