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Profile of Bacterial Community and Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Typical Vegetable Greenhouse Soil

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2022 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xuexia Yuan, Xuexia Yuan, Wenbo Wang Yong Zhang, Chenxi Sun, Wenbo Wang Wenbo Wang Yuanjuan Wu, Yuanjuan Wu, Lixia Fan, Lixia Fan, Bing Liu, Wenbo Wang

Summary

Researchers profiled bacterial communities and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in soils from two vegetable greenhouse counties in China with long cultivation histories, finding that Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Acidobacteria dominated bacterial communities while ARGs including aadA, tetL, and sul1 were widely detected, associated with intensive agrochemical and manure inputs.

The use of vegetable greenhouse production systems has increased rapidly because of the increasing demand for food materials. The vegetable greenhouse production industry is confronted with serious environmental problems, due to their high agrochemical inputs and intensive utilization. Besides this, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, carrying antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs), may enter into a vegetable greenhouse with the application of animal manure. Bacterial communities and ARGs were investigated in two typical vegetable-greenhouse-using counties with long histories of vegetable cultivation. The results showed that <i>Proteobacteria</i>, <i>Firmicutes</i>, <i>Acidobacteria</i>, <i>Chloroflexi</i>, and <i>Gemmatimonadetes</i> were the dominant phyla, while <i>aadA</i>, <i>tetL</i>, <i>sul1</i>, and <i>sul2</i> were the most common ARGs in greenhouse vegetable soil. Heatmap and principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) demonstrated that the differences between two counties were more significant than those among soils with different cultivation histories in the same county, suggesting that more effects on bacterial communities and ARGs were caused by soil type and manure type than by the accumulation of cultivation years. The positive correlation between the abundance of the <i>intI</i> gene with specific ARGs highlights the horizontal transfer potential of these ARGs. A total of 11 phyla were identified as the potential hosts of specific ARGs. Based on redundancy analysis (RDA), Ni and pH were the most potent factors determining the bacterial communities, and Cr was the top factor affecting the relative abundance of the ARGs. These results might be helpful in drawing more attention to the risk of manure recycling in the vegetable greenhouse, and further developing a strategy for practical manure application and sustainable production of vegetable greenhouses.

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