Microorganisms, Vol. 14, Pages 1185: Multidimensional Differences and Driving Mechanisms of Bacterial Communities in Urban and Rural Rivers Across China

Fuente: Microorganisms - Revista científica (MDPI)
Microorganisms, Vol. 14, Pages 1185: Multidimensional Differences and Driving Mechanisms of Bacterial Communities in Urban and Rural Rivers Across China
Microorganisms doi: 10.3390/microorganisms14061185
Authors:
Lina Wu
Shuai Lu
Fanjin Ye
Jinxia Lu
Xiaoling Liu
Yanfang Tian

This study systematically compared the structural, functional, pathogenic, and assembly-mechanism characteristics of bacterial communities between urban and rural rivers across China, based on integrated water quality data from 421 sampling sites and 16S rRNA gene sequences from 475 sampling sites. The results revealed that urban rivers had significantly higher nutrient concentrations and bacterial α-diversity, along with lower β-diversity. Urban rivers were enriched with organic matter-degrading phyla such as Chloroflexi and Acidobacteriota and might exhibit more complex co-occurrence networks (average degree: 85.41). In contrast, rural rivers were enriched with phyla including Firmicutes and Cyanobacteria, as well as genera such as Exiguobacterium and Limnohabitans, and might display higher network modularity (modularity: 0.59) and greater spatial heterogeneity in community composition. Functional prediction indicated stronger carbon-cycling potential in urban rivers, whereas nitrogen-cycling functions did not differ between the two river types. Regarding pathogen composition, urban rivers contained a higher number of pathogen species than rural rivers. It was suggested that stochastic processes dominated community assembly in both systems; however, heterogeneous selection contributed more strongly in urban rivers (14.7%). Overall, this work elucidated systematic differences in bacterial community structure, function, pathogen profile, and assembly mechanisms between urban and rural rivers, offering a scientific foundation for differentiated watershed management.