
AbstractMicrobial diversity studies regarding the aquatic communities that experienced or are experiencing environmental problems are essential for the comprehension of the remediation dynamics. In this pilot study, we present data on the phylogenetic and ecological structure of microorganisms from epipelagic water samples collected in the Small Aral Sea (SAS). The raw data were generated by massive parallel sequencing using the shotgun approach. As expected, most of the identified DNA sequences belonged to Terrabacteria and Actinobacteria (40% and 37% of the total reads, respectively). The occurrence of Deinococcus‐Thermus, Armatimonadetes, Chloroflexi in the epipelagic SAS waters was less anticipated. Surprising was also the detection of sequences, which are characteristic for strict anaerobes—Ignavibacteria, hydrogen‐oxidizing bacteria, and archaeal methanogenic species. We suppose that the observed very broad range of phylogenetic and ecological features displayed by the SAS reads demonstrates a more intensive mixing of water masses originating from diverse ecological niches of the Aral‐Syr Darya River basin than presumed before.
570, 550, Oceans and Seas, shotgun sequencing, Microbiology, Phylogeny, metagenomics, Bacteria, Microbiota, Original Articles, Biodiversity, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Uzbekistan, Archaea, QR1-502, Kazakhstan, ecological structure, microbial diversity, Metagenome, Metagenomics, Small Aral Sea
570, 550, Oceans and Seas, shotgun sequencing, Microbiology, Phylogeny, metagenomics, Bacteria, Microbiota, Original Articles, Biodiversity, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Uzbekistan, Archaea, QR1-502, Kazakhstan, ecological structure, microbial diversity, Metagenome, Metagenomics, Small Aral Sea
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