0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Study of the Bacterial, Fungal, and Archaeal Communities Structures near the Bulgarian Antarctic Research Base “St. Kliment Ohridski” on Livingston Island, Antarctica

Life 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Vesselin V. Doytchinov, Slavil Peykov, Svetoslav Dimov

Summary

Not relevant to microplastics — this study characterizes bacterial, fungal, and archaeal microbial communities near a Bulgarian Antarctic research base using amplicon-based metagenomics, with no connection to microplastic pollution.

As belonging to one of the most isolated continents on our planet, the microbial composition of different environments in Antarctica could hold a plethora of undiscovered species with the potential for biotechnological applications. This manuscript delineates our discoveries after an expedition to the Bulgarian Antarctic Base "St. Kliment Ohridski" situated on Livingston Island, Antarctica. Amplicon-based metagenomics targeting the 16S rRNA genes and ITS2 region were employed to assess the metagenomes of the bacterial, fungal, and archaeal communities across diverse sites within and proximal to the research station. The predominant bacterial assemblages identified included Oxyphotobacteria, Bacteroidia, Gammaprotobacteria, and Alphaprotobacteria. A substantial proportion of cyanobacteria reads were attributed to a singular uncultured taxon within the family Leptolyngbyaceae. The bacterial profile of a lagoon near the base exhibited indications of penguin activity, characterized by a higher abundance of Clostridia, similar to lithotelm samples from Hannah Pt. Although most fungal reads in the samples could not be identified at the species level, noteworthy genera, namely Betamyces and Tetracladium, were identified. Archaeal abundance was negligible, with prevalent groups including Woesearchaeales, Nitrosarchaeum, Candidatus Nitrosopumilus, and Marine Group II.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Study of the Bacterial, Fungal, and Archaeal Communities Structures near the Bulgarian Antarctic Research Base “St. Kliment Ohridski” on Livingston Island, Antarctica

Not relevant to microplastics — this paper profiles the microbial communities (bacteria, fungi, archaea) found near a Bulgarian Antarctic research station, finding diverse and largely unidentified species with potential biotechnological uses.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic impacts archaeal abundance, microbial communities, and their network connectivity in a Sub-Saharan soil environment

Researchers used 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to characterise prokaryotic communities in native plastisphere and soil from Sub-Saharan African environments with high unmanaged plastic waste. The plastisphere enriched distinct bacterial communities and archaeal taxa compared to surrounding soil, and high-population sites showed elevated potential pathogen abundance.

Article Tier 2

Plastisphere colonization in Antarctica: a microcosmos approach

Researchers conducted a 33-day microcosm experiment incubating polypropylene, polyester, polystyrene, and quartz fragments in Antarctic seawater and used SEM, flow cytometry, qPCR, and metagenomics to characterize bacterial plastisphere colonization, finding that microbial community composition was driven primarily by incubation time rather than polymer type, with Oleispira potentially involved in hydrocarbon degradation.

Article Tier 2

Dynamics and functions of microbial communities in the plastisphere in temperate coastal environments

Researchers explored microbial communities colonizing microplastics in coastal environments of Japan, comparing bacterial and fungal communities across different plastic types, water, sediment, and sand. The study found that while microbial communities varied by sample type and location rather than plastic shape, microplastics harbored hydrocarbon-degrading organisms as well as potential pathogens, highlighting the ecological significance of plastic-associated biofilms.

Article Tier 2

Diverse groups of fungi are associated with plastics in the surface waters of the Western South Atlantic and the Antarctic Peninsula

DNA metabarcoding of fungi on marine plastic debris from the Western South Atlantic and Antarctic Peninsula revealed 64 orders across eight fungal phyla, including many taxa not previously described on plastic surfaces. The study is the first to characterize the plastic-associated fungal communities of the Southern Hemisphere, highlighting the unknown ecological roles of plastic-colonizing fungi.

Share this paper