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Soil moisture-dependent tire wear particles aging processes shift soil microbial communities and elevated nitrous oxide emission on drylands

Qiao Xu, Zhiyong Wu, Zhihong Xu, Gang Li

2024The Science of The Total Environment11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Tire wear particles (TWPs) have been an emerging threat to the soil ecosystem, while impact of the TWPs aging on soil microbial communities remains poorly understood. This study investigated the dynamic responses of soil microbial communities to the TWPs aging under both wet and flooded conditions. We found that different soil moisture conditions resulted in distinct microbial community structures. Soil bacteria were more sensitive to wet conditions, while soil fungi were more sensitive to flooded conditions. The family Symbiobacteraceae was predominant in the TWP-sphere under both wet and flooded conditions after 60 days, followed by Brevibacillaceae . Notably, we observed that TWPs input significantly increased nitrous oxide (N 2 O) emission from dryland soil . Several taxa including Cyanobacteriales , Blastocatellaceae and Pyrinomonadaceae were identified as TWP-biomarkers in soils and potentially played significant roles in N 2 O emissions from drylands. Their responses to the TWPs input correlated closely with changes in the relative abundance of genes involved in ammonia oxidation ( amoA/B ), nitrite reduction ( nirS/K ) and N 2 O reduction ( nosZ ) in drylands. Our results demonstrate that soil moisture-dependent TWP aging influences N 2 O emission by altering both the associated microbial communities and the relevant genes.

Topics & Concepts

Nitrous oxideMoistureEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental chemistryWater contentSoil scienceMaterials scienceChemistryComposite materialGeotechnical engineeringGeologyOrganic chemistryMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamicsbiodegradable polymer synthesis and properties
Soil moisture-dependent tire wear particles aging processes shift soil microbial communities and elevated nitrous oxide emission on drylands | Litcius