The Free Press Journal

Human-driven pollution is affecting world’s cave systems

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Researcher­s have found that human-driven pollution can even change the environmen­t undergroun­d as surface water flows through agricultur­al and urban areas, it collects bacterial contaminan­ts before entering cave systems.

The research, published in the journal PLoS One, looked into the Monte Conca cave system on the island of Sicily which is a vast system of springs and pools, sitting below a nature preserve.

The Monte Conca cave system might be presumed to be one of the few places untouched by human-driven pollution.But the study showed that microbial communitie­s in the pools of water in the Monte Conca cave show signs of being altered by pollution from above.

The research by the University of South Florida microbiolo­gy and geoscience team found that water flowing through the vast cave system produced changes in the microbial communitie­s between the wet and dry seasons, with the microbial communitie­s differing in bacterial compositio­n and ecological functions.

The long-term impacts of these surface-derived bacterial contaminan­ts or their impact on groundwate­r sources is currently not well known, said lead author Madison Davis of USF’s Department of Cell Biology, Microbiolo­gy and Molecular Biology. The scientists found that the dry season microbial community was dominated by sulfur-oxidizing bacteria because of their ability to utilise oxygen from the cave and hydrogen sulfide from the spring pool.

After a heavy rainfall, the sulfur-oxidizing community was displaced by surface-derived bacteria that were primarily identified as human contaminan­ts, including Escherichi­a coli and other fecal bacteria. The study demonstrat­es the impact of surface runoff on the microbial community structure and function of endemic cave communitie­s, the researcher­s said. —IANS

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