Light-Dominated Selection Shaping Filamentous Cyanobacterial Assemblages Drives Odor Problem in a Drinking Water Reservoir

Light shapes their niche
Pseudanabaena reigns
Odors subside slow
Cyanobacteria
Filamentous cyanobacteria
Niche differentiation
MIB odor problem
Drinking water safety

npj Clean Water: Ming Su, Yiping Zhu, Tom Andersen, Xianyun Wang, Zhiyong Yu, Jinping Lu, Yichao Song, Tengxin Cao, Jianwei Yu, Yu Zhang, and Min Yang. Light-Dominated Selection Shaping Filamentous Cyanobacterial Assemblages Drives Odor Problem in a Drinking Water Reservoir. npj Clean Water 2022;5:37. 10.1038/s41545-022-00181-2.

Authors
Affiliations

Yiping Zhu

Shanghai Chengtou Raw Water Co. Ltd

Tom Andersen

Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Norway

Xianyun Wang

National Engineering Research Center of China (South) for Urban Water, Shanghai, China

Zhiyong Yu

Jinping Lu

Yichao Song

Shanghai Chengtou Raw Water Co. Ltd

Tengxin Cao

Jianwei Yu

Yu Zhang

Published

Aug 23, 2022

Doi

Abstract

Filamentous cyanobacteria have substantial niche overlap, and the causal mechanism behind their succession remains unclear. This has practical significance since several filamentous genera are the main producers of the musty odorant 2-methylisoborneol (MIB), which lead to odor problems in drinking water. This study investigates the relationships between two filamentous cyanobacteria, the MIB-producing genus Planktothrix and the non-MIB-producing genus Pseudanabaena, in a drinking water reservoir. We firstly identified their niche characteristics based on a monitoring dataset, combined this information with culture experiments and developed a niche-based model to clarify these processes. The results reveal that the optimal light requirements of Pseudanabaena (1.56 mol m-2d-1) are lower than those of Planktothrix (3.67 mol m-2d-1); their light niche differentiation led to a fundamental replacement of Planktothrix (2013) by Pseudanabaena (2015) along with MIB decreases in this reservoir during 2013 and 2015. This study suggests that light is a major driving force responsible for the succession between filamentous cyanobacteria, and that subtle niche differentiation may play an important role in shaping the filamentous cyanobacterial assemblages that drives the MIB odor problems in drinking water reservoirs.

Graphical abstract

Citation

Add to Zotero


@Article{su2022lightdominated,
    title       = {Light-dominated selection shaping filamentous cyanobacterial assemblages drives odor problem in a drinking water reservoir},
    author      = {Ming Su and Yiping Zhu and Tom Andersen and Xianyun Wang and Zhiyong Yu and Jinping Lu and Yichao Song and Tengxin Cao and Jianwei Yu and Yu Zhang and Min Yang},
    year        = 2022,
    journal     = {npj Clean Water},
    publisher   = {Springer Science and Business Media {LLC}},
    volume      = 5,
    pages       = {37},
    url         = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-022-00181-2},
    doi         = {10.1038/s41545-022-00181-2},
    number      = 1
}