Litcius/Paper detail

Ant nests as a microbial hot spots in a long-term heavy metal-contaminated soils

Beata Klimek, Hanna Poliwka-Modliborek, Irena M. Grześ

2021Environmental Science and Pollution Research14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Interactions between soil fauna and soil microorganisms are not fully recognized, especially in extreme environments, such as long-term metal-polluted soils. The purpose of the study was to assess how the presence of Lasius niger ants affected soil microbial characteristics in a long-term metal-polluted area (Upper Silesia in Poland). Paired soil samples were taken from bulk soil and from ant nests and analysed for a range of soil physicochemical properties, including metal content (zinc, cadmium, and lead). Microbial analysis included soil microbial activity (soil respiration rate), microbial biomass (substrate-induced respiration rate), and bacteria catabolic properties (Biolog ® ECO plates). Soil collected from ant nests was drier and was characterized by a lower content of organic matter, carbon and nitrogen contents, and also lower metal content than bulk soil. Soil microbial respiration rate was positively related to soil pH ( p = 0.01) and negatively to water-soluble metal content, integrated into TI ws index ( p = 0.01). Soil microbial biomass was negatively related to TI ws index ( p = 0.04). Neither soil microbial activity and biomass nor bacteria catabolic activity and diversity indices differed between bulk soil and ant nests. Taken together, ant activity reduced soil contamination by metals in a microscale which support microbial community activity and biomass but did not affect Biolog® culturable bacteria.

Topics & Concepts

Soil waterMicrobial population biologyBiomass (ecology)MicroorganismEnvironmental chemistrySoil respirationSoil organic matterEnvironmental scienceWater contentRespiration rateSoil biologyQ10AgronomyChemistryRespirationBiologyBotanySoil scienceBacteriaGeotechnical engineeringGeneticsEngineeringInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorPlant and animal studiesEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies