Abandoned shipwrecks are sitting at the bottom of oceans, lakes, and rivers around the world. Over time, microbial-comprised biofilms can help protect wrecks against chemical corrosion or contribute to their deterioration through microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) by organisms including iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB). Assessing the community assembly of these biofilms will give us a better understanding of the role these microbes play in MIC and the factors that influence it. Here, we determine if microbial community composition differs across a shallow freshwater ferrous-hulled shipwreck environment. Results suggest that there was a statistically significant difference among the sample types indicating the wreck environments around Accomac influenced the community composition. This is consistent with previous observations within an estuarine, shallow-water wreck environment. Bacteroidota, Chloroflexota, and Cyanobacteriota were the primary taxa responsible for differences among these wreck environments. Interestingly, port-side biofilm communities were significantly different than those on the starboard side suggesting physical factors of the environment drove niche partitioning on each side of the wreck. Similarly, FeOB enrichments and known FeOB taxa were found across the entire wreck but were primarily found in samples associated with the port side of the wreck. Amplicon sequencing identified both known FeOB and SRB taxa with a higher proportion of FeOB than SRB. Overall, these results indicate that there is niche partitioning of the microbial communities as well as with corrosion-causing taxa within a shallow freshwater wreck site which may lead to variation in how microbes may contribute to the protection or deterioration of these ferrous-hulled wrecks.
Importance: The overall structure, abundance, and diversity of microbial communities on shipwrecks have recently been studied in marine aquatic environments. While previous studies have looked at the microbial communities associated with shallow-water ferrous-hulled wrecks in marine environments, studies focusing on freshwater wreck systems are limited. The purpose of this study was to determine microbial community diversity and composition trends across the Accomac shipwreck environment. Furthermore, shipwrecks are colonized by corrosion-causing taxa, such as iron-oxidizing bacteria and sulfate-reducing bacteria which have been shown to influence the biocorrosion of ferrous-hulled structures. Identification of various microbes in biofilms, as well as corrosion-causing microbes, can help researchers identify the role they play in aquatic ecosystem development and persistence as well as artificial reef integrity. Understanding how microbes assemble on wrecks will provide insight into preservation strategies to prevent deterioration of these wrecks over time, as well as limiting biocorrosion of similar structures.
Keywords: biofilm assembly; environmental microbiology; freshwater shipwreck; iron-oxidizing bacteria; microbial communities; microbial influenced corrosion.