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Assessment of pollution impact on aquatic microbial communities
based on DNA hybridization and protozoan identification: preliminary
method development and comparison
Sarah E. Palmer, B. R. Niederlehner &
John Cairns, Jr*
University Center for Environmental and Hazardous Materials
Studies, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Blacksburg, VA 24061-0415, U.S.A. (* author for correspondence)
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Abstract
Common methods of assessing the biological impact of
point source discharge involve a census of organisms above and below
the discharge. The identification and enumeration of organisms necessary
for this approach can be time consuming and costly. When microbial
communities are used, identification and enumeration are often impossible
because the majority of species are identifiable only when cultured
and most native species cannot be cultured. As such, little is known
about the response of nonculturable aquatic microbial communities
to anthropogenic changes. We isolated aquatic microbial DNA from
colonized artificial substrates in two streams receiving industrial
waste. DNA was isolated from the microbial communities upstream
and downstream of the discharges and the similarity of these communities
were compared by DNA-DNA hybridization. These novel estimates of
impact were compared to more conventional estimates based on a component
of the microbial communities that could be readily identified, the
protozoans. Protozoan species were identified and similarity between
upstream and downstream stations was assessed using Jaccard's similarity
index.
In the Roanoke River, protozoan species richness was
significantly lower at the downstream station. Both Jaccard's coefficients
and DNA hybridizations indicated that upstream communities were
more similar to each other than with the downstream site. However,
these differences were not significant. Estimates of community similarity
from Jaccard's coefficients and DNA hybridizations were not correlated.
In Peak Creek, protozoan species richness was significantly lower
at the downstream station. Jaccard's coefficients and DNA hybridizations
were not significantly higher within upstream stations than between
upstream and downstream stations. The two similarity measures were
not correlated. Problems in this preliminary study included small
sample sizes and highly variable background on hybridization membranes
resulting from the use of nonradioactive DNA probe label and detection
methods. Alterative approaches using radioisotopes or COT curves
may be more viable means of making molecular methods a useful tool
in impact assessment.
Keywords: aquatic microbial DNA hybridization, pollution
assessment
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