Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater

In this study fungal profiles of agricultural field soil irrigated with industrial wastewater and sewage containing varying concentrations of heavy metals (Chromium, Nickel, Cobalt, Copper and Cadmium) have been investigated. The impact of long term heavy metal contamination on emergence of heavy...

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Main Authors: Mohd. Imran, Iqbal Ahmad, Tharcisse Barasubiye, Hussein H. Abulreesh, Samreen, Mohammad Khalil Monjed, Khaled Elbanna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology
Subjects:
mic
Online Access:https://microbiologyjournal.org/heavy-metal-tolerance-among-free-living-fungi-isolated-from-soil-receiving-long-term-application-of-wastewater/
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author Mohd. Imran
Iqbal Ahmad
Tharcisse Barasubiye
Hussein H. Abulreesh
Samreen
Mohammad Khalil Monjed
Khaled Elbanna
spellingShingle Mohd. Imran
Iqbal Ahmad
Tharcisse Barasubiye
Hussein H. Abulreesh
Samreen
Mohammad Khalil Monjed
Khaled Elbanna
Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology
aspergillus
heavy metals
soil fungi
metal tolerance
mic
wastewater
author_facet Mohd. Imran
Iqbal Ahmad
Tharcisse Barasubiye
Hussein H. Abulreesh
Samreen
Mohammad Khalil Monjed
Khaled Elbanna
author_sort Mohd. Imran
title Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
title_short Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
title_full Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
title_fullStr Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of Wastewater
title_sort heavy metal tolerance among free-living fungi isolated from soil receiving long term application of wastewater
publisher Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology
series Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology
issn 0973-7510
2581-690X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description In this study fungal profiles of agricultural field soil irrigated with industrial wastewater and sewage containing varying concentrations of heavy metals (Chromium, Nickel, Cobalt, Copper and Cadmium) have been investigated. The impact of long term heavy metal contamination on emergence of heavy metal tolerant soil fungal population, changes in morphological diversity and metal tolerance limits among isolated fungi was studied. The agricultural field soil received long term (>20 years) wastewater application showed metal accumulation compared to the untreated soil. The viable count of soil fungal population from three different agricultural field soil was found in order of 105 to 10 4 CFU gm-1 of soil indicating a normal viable count with little variations. Viable plate count of fungal population on metal amended plates decreased with increasing concentration of tested metals (Cr6+, Cd++. Cu++, Co++ and Ni++) from 100 to 400 µgml-1. The decrease was higher on cadmium amended plates and lower against Chromium. The control site, which did not receive wastewater application showed relatively less metal tolerant fungal viable count on Cd++ and Ni++ plates when compared at 100 µgml-1as compared to contaminated sites. Similarly, presence of metal tolerant fungal population was also observed from wastewater sample. The common soil fungi isolated and characterized from metal amended plates belong to 18 genera and 15 unidentified species. Occurrence of different fungal genera from site A B and C indicated different patterns of decrease on different metal amended plates with increasing concentration. Among these 73 isolated fungal species a high level of tolerance was recorded to Cr6+ followed by Cu++, Co++ and Ni++ while the lowest level of tolerance was for Cd++. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of 73 metal tolerant fungal isolates, was ranged from 200 to 2000 μgml-1 against one or more heavy metals. The level of tolerance to heavy metals also varied even among the isolates of single genus. Aspergillus was the predominant genus recovered from contaminated soils where the MIC values are highly varied among different isolates of Aspergillus. The current study found that long term release of wastewater has not disturbed the fungal population dynamics in contaminated sites as compared to uncontaminated sites. However, it tends to exert selective pressure on fungal populations of soil, leading to the development of increased level of metal tolerance in fungal species.
topic aspergillus
heavy metals
soil fungi
metal tolerance
mic
wastewater
url https://microbiologyjournal.org/heavy-metal-tolerance-among-free-living-fungi-isolated-from-soil-receiving-long-term-application-of-wastewater/
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spelling doaj-d08c04af18fa4ec9987e5dba7cc346772021-10-02T18:58:28ZengJournal of Pure and Applied MicrobiologyJournal of Pure and Applied Microbiology0973-75102581-690X2020-03-0114115717010.22207/JPAM.14.1.17Heavy Metal Tolerance Among Free-living Fungi Isolated from Soil Receiving Long Term Application of WastewaterMohd. Imran0Iqbal Ahmad1Tharcisse Barasubiye2Hussein H. Abulreesh3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3289-696XSamreen4Mohammad Khalil Monjed5Khaled Elbanna61 Department of Agricultural Microbiology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh 202002, India.1 Department of Agricultural Microbiology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh 202002, India.2 Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 960 Carling Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, KIA 0C6 Canada.3 Department of Biology, Faculty of Applied Science, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. 4 Research Laboratories Center, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.1 Department of Agricultural Microbiology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh 202002, India.3 Department of Biology, Faculty of Applied Science, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. 4 Research Laboratories Center, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.3 Department of Biology, Faculty of Applied Science, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. 4 Research Laboratories Center, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. 5 Department of Agricultural Microbiology, Faculty of Agriculture, Fayoum University, Fayoum, Egypt.In this study fungal profiles of agricultural field soil irrigated with industrial wastewater and sewage containing varying concentrations of heavy metals (Chromium, Nickel, Cobalt, Copper and Cadmium) have been investigated. The impact of long term heavy metal contamination on emergence of heavy metal tolerant soil fungal population, changes in morphological diversity and metal tolerance limits among isolated fungi was studied. The agricultural field soil received long term (>20 years) wastewater application showed metal accumulation compared to the untreated soil. The viable count of soil fungal population from three different agricultural field soil was found in order of 105 to 10 4 CFU gm-1 of soil indicating a normal viable count with little variations. Viable plate count of fungal population on metal amended plates decreased with increasing concentration of tested metals (Cr6+, Cd++. Cu++, Co++ and Ni++) from 100 to 400 µgml-1. The decrease was higher on cadmium amended plates and lower against Chromium. The control site, which did not receive wastewater application showed relatively less metal tolerant fungal viable count on Cd++ and Ni++ plates when compared at 100 µgml-1as compared to contaminated sites. Similarly, presence of metal tolerant fungal population was also observed from wastewater sample. The common soil fungi isolated and characterized from metal amended plates belong to 18 genera and 15 unidentified species. Occurrence of different fungal genera from site A B and C indicated different patterns of decrease on different metal amended plates with increasing concentration. Among these 73 isolated fungal species a high level of tolerance was recorded to Cr6+ followed by Cu++, Co++ and Ni++ while the lowest level of tolerance was for Cd++. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of 73 metal tolerant fungal isolates, was ranged from 200 to 2000 μgml-1 against one or more heavy metals. The level of tolerance to heavy metals also varied even among the isolates of single genus. Aspergillus was the predominant genus recovered from contaminated soils where the MIC values are highly varied among different isolates of Aspergillus. The current study found that long term release of wastewater has not disturbed the fungal population dynamics in contaminated sites as compared to uncontaminated sites. However, it tends to exert selective pressure on fungal populations of soil, leading to the development of increased level of metal tolerance in fungal species. https://microbiologyjournal.org/heavy-metal-tolerance-among-free-living-fungi-isolated-from-soil-receiving-long-term-application-of-wastewater/aspergillusheavy metalssoil fungimetal tolerancemicwastewater