Do coastal bacterioplankton communities hold the molecular key to the rapid biodegradation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) from shipping scrubber effluent?

Abstract

Shipping scrubber effluents, containing a cocktail of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs), show undisputed effects at single-species experiments while PAHs fate in the marine environment after effluent discharge is still investigated. Bacterioplankton, composed of abundant diverse taxa with xenobiotic-degrading capabilities, are the first responders to scrubber emissions and can affect PAHs impacts on marine life. This work aims to examine the fate of scrubber effluent PAHs and alkyl-PAHs in mesocosms of coastal bacterioplankton communities from a pristine phytoplankton carbon biomass was 8.16 μg C L− 1) and a eutrophic (105.35 μg C L− 1) coastal site. Highthroughput 16S rRNA metabarcoding revealed differential responses of the bacterioplankton linked to their initial community structure and population abundances. Taxa known for their PAHs-degrading capacity were retrieved, including the genera Roseobacter, Porticoccus, Marinomonas, Arcobacter, Lentibacter, Lacinutrix, Pseudospirillum, Glaciecola, Vibrio, Marivita, and Mycobacterium, and were found to have increased roles in shifted communities by increasing their relative abundances at least 5-fold in treatments with high scrubber effluent additions. Additionally, metagenomic analysis of shotgun sequencing, indicated an increase on the number of Clusters of Orthologous Genes (COGs) associated with pathways involved in PAHs degradation. Up to 198 more COGs involved in signal transduction were retrieved in scrubber effluent enriched mesocosms compared to controls, while 15, 86, and 136 more COGs associated with naphthalene, aromatic compound, and benzoate degradation, respectively, were detected in the pristine mesocosms after effluent additions. In both experiments, bacterioplankton responses towards xenobiotic degradation under increased PAHs and alkyl-PAHs were coupled with a drop in their concentrations, below the limit of detection by Day 3 of the experiment in the eutrophic community, and by half in Day 6 in the pristine environment's community. Our findings indicate that PAHs and alkyl-PAHs impacts can be rapidly reduced in natural systems of high bacterial activity


This work was conducted in the framework of EMERGE project that received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, under grant agreement Nr. 874990. Furthermore, it was partially funded by the European Union – Next Generation EU - National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP) – Greece 2.0. Project “NAVGREEN – Green Shipping of Zero Carbon Footprint” (Project Code: TAEDR-0534767). M. Gros acknowledges her Ramon y Cajal contract (RYC2020-030324-I) funded by the MCIN/AEI 10.13039/501100011033 and by “ESF Investing in your future”

Document Type

Article


Published version


peer reviewed

Publisher

Elsevier

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Reconeixement 4.0 Internacional

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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