Effects of different colored polyethylene mulching films on bacterial communities from soil during enrichment incubation

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2022.114160Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • α-Diversity of bacterial communities lower with plastic mulch film (PMF).

  • Community compositions similar in treatments with same colored PMF.

  • Bacteria with capacity to degrade hydrocarbons core members under PMF treatments.

  • Bacterial communities under PMF predicted to potentially degrade hydrocarbons.

  • Color of PMF influenced bacterial communities more than source of soil samples.

Abstract

Studies have shown that mulching agricultural fields with plastic residues can influence microbial communities in the environment, but few studies have investigated the differences in the soil microbial communities in distinct areas under mulching with different colored plastic products. Thus, in this study, we explored how different colored polyethylene mulching films (PMFs) might affect soil bacterial communities during enrichment incubation. We found significant differences in the bacterial communities under different colored PMFs after incubation. Treatment with the same colored PMF obtained more similar bacterial community compositions. For instance, at the class level, Gammaproteobacteria and Bacteroidia were most abundant with black PMF, whereas Actinobacteria and Bacteroidia were most abundant with white PMF. The most abundant genera were Acinetobacter and Chryseobacterium with black PMF but Rhodanobacter and Paenarthrobacter with white PMF. Polyethylene- and hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria were the core members detected under both treatments, and the bacterial communities were predicted to have the potential for the biodegradation and metabolism of xenobiotics after enrichment culture according to the Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States (PICRUSt) tool. In addition, the bacterial communities in soil from Xinjiang treated with white PMF and in soil from Yangling treated with black PMF were strongly correlated and stable. Our results suggest that the color of the PMF applied affected the soil bacterial communities, where plastics with the same color may have recruited similar species of microorganisms, although the origins of these microorganisms were not the same.

Keywords

Polyethylene mulching film
Plastic color
Bacterial community
Community Succession
Enrichment incubation

Data Availability

The authors are unable or have chosen not to specify which data has been used.

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1

Peiyuan Wang and Tingting Liu contributed equally to this manuscript.