Connectivity of bacterial assemblages along the Loa River in the Atacama Desert, Chile
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Zárate, Ana
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The Loa River is the only perennial artery that crosses the Atacama Desert in northern
Chile. It plays an important role in the ecological and economic development of
the most water-stressed region, revealing the impact of the mining industry, which
exacerbate regional water shortages for many organisms and ecological processes.
Despite this, the river system has remained understudied. To our knowledge, this study
provides the first effort to attempt to compare the microbial communities at spatial
scale along the Loa River, as well as investigate the physicochemical factors that could
modulate this important biological component that still remains largely unexplored.
The analysis of the spatial bacterial distribution and their interconnections in the water
column and sediment samples from eight sites located in three sections along the river
catchment (upper, middle and lower) was conducted using 16S rRNA gene-based
Illumina MiSeq sequencing. Among a total of 543 ASVs identified at the family level,
over 40.5% were cosmopolitan in the river and distributed within a preference pattern
by the sediment substrate with 162 unique ASVs, while only 87 were specific to the
column water. Bacterial diversity gradually decreased from the headwaters, where the
upper section had the largest number of unique families. Distinct groupings of bacterial
communities often associated with anthropogenic disturbance, including Burkholderiaceae and Flavobacteriaceae families were predominant in the less-impacted upstream
section. Members of the Arcobacteraceae and Marinomonadaceae were prominent in
the agriculturally and mining-impacted middle sector while Rhodobacteraceae and
Coxiellaceae were most abundant families in downstream sites. Such shifts in the
community structure were also related to the influence of salinity, chlorophyll, dissolvedoxygen and redox potential. Network analyses corroborated the strong connectivity and
modular structure of bacterial communities across this desert river, shedding light on
taxonomic relatedness of co-occurring species and highlighting the need for planning
the integral conservation of this basin.
