Data_Sewage sludge fertilization affects microbial community structure and its resistome in agricultural soils (dataset)
Abstract
Global sewage sludge production is rapidly increasing, and its safe disposal is becoming an
increasingly serious issue. One of the main methods of municipal sewage sludge management is based
on its agricultural use. The wastewater and sewage sludge contain numerous antibiotic resistance
genes (ARGs), and its microbiome differs significantly from the soil microbial community. The aim of
the study was to assess the changes occurring in the soil microbial community and resistome after
the addition of sewage sludge from municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in central Poland,
from which the sludge is used for fertilizing agricultural soils on a regular basis. This study used a
high-throughput shotgun metagenomics approach to compare the microbial communities and ARGs
present in two soils fertilized with sewage sludge. The two soils represented different land uses and
different physicochemical and granulometric properties. Both soils were characterized by a similar
taxonomic composition of the bacterial community, despite dissimilarities between soils properties.
Five phyla predominated, viz. Planctomycetes, Actinobacteria, Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi and
Firmicutes, and they were present in comparable proportions in both soils. Network analysis revealed
that the application of sewage sludge resulted in substantial qualitative and quantitative changes
in bacterial taxonomic profile, with most abundant phyla being considerably depleted and replaced
by Proteobacteria and Spirochaetes. In addition, the ratio of oligotrophic to copiotrophic bacteria
substantially decreased in both amended soils. Furthermore, fertilized soils demonstrated greater
diversity and richness of ARGs compared to control soils. The increased abundance concerned mainly
genes of resistance to antibiotics most commonly used in human and animal medicine. The level of
heavy metals in sewage sludge was low and did not exceed the standards permitted in Poland for
sludge used in agriculture, and their level in fertilized soils was still inconsiderable.
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