Carcass decomposition in water may cause serious environmental pollution, which poses a great threat to water quality and public health. However, water microbial community succession and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) during carcass decomposition process are less explored. Using high-throughput sequencing and high-throughput quantitative PCR techniques, the temporal succession of water bacterial communities and ARGs profiles in experimental groups (fish carcasses) and control groups (no carcasses) containing two different types of water (the Yellow River water and tap water) in different successional stages were studied. Our results showed that NH3-N concentration in the corpse groups has greatly risen and exceeded more than 28 times on average over the safety thresholds of water quality. Some potential pathogenic genera Comamonas, Bacteroides and Pseudomonas significantly increased during carcass decomposition process. The bacterial communities of the Yellow River water and tap water in the experimental groups exhibited similar succession patterns, and community dissimilarities between the two groups decreased and smaller over time, indicating that bacterial community convergence. NH3-N, NO3-N and time were three most important factors in determining bacteria community structures. The influence of water type on corpse bacterial community structures was significant but weak. The gene copy number of seven detected ARGs (cmlA1-01, floR, sul1, sul2, tetG-01, tetM-01 and tetQ) in the experimental groups was more abundant than that in the control groups. The ARGs concentrations in the corpse groups were even enriched 19-fold (minimum) to 148-fold (maximum) compared to the gene tetQ of the Yellow River water in the control groups on the initial stage. Redundancy analysis (RDA) indicated that Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes were significantly correlated with all detected ARGs. This study emphasizes that cadaver degradation leads to the deterioration of nitrogen pollution, the abundance increase of potential pathogens, and the transfer of ARGs from dead animals to water environment, thereby uncovering the harmful effects of related water pollution for human health.
Keywords: Antibiotic resistance genes; Bacterial community succession; Carcass decomposition; Potential pathogens; Public health; Water pollution.
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