key: cord-0264130-9on0a084 authors: Alvarez, David A; Cadavid, Nikolya A; Childs, Cale A; Cupelli, Matthew F; De Leao, Victoria A; Diaz, Alyssa M; Eldridge, Sophie A; Elhabashy, Yasmin B; Fleming, Allison E; Fox, Nathan A; Franco, Marianna; Gaspari, James C; Gerstin, Isabella M; Gibson, Kimberlee A; Huott, Alyssa L; Johnson, Alex O; Majhess, Ellie G; Mantilla, Gabriela; Perez, Gabriella S; Prieto, Juliet J; Reutter, Bridget C; Rivera, Elena I; Rootes, Thomas R; Sellers, Jade; Streibig, Allison M; Wilkinson, Joseph S; Zayas-Bazan, Siona; Bhadha, Jehangir H.; Clum, Alicia; Daum, Christopher; Glavina del Rio, Tijana; Lail, Kathleen; Roux, Simon; Eloe-Fadrosh, Emiley A.; Benskin, Jonathan B. title: Metagenomes from the Loxahatchee wildlife refuge in the Florida Everglades date: 2021-02-16 journal: bioRxiv DOI: 10.1101/2021.02.16.430518 sha: 643fd110a8357444a85c84f88f020226e7ead231 doc_id: 264130 cord_uid: 9on0a084 The Florida Everglades ecosystem represents a significant wetlands area and serves as a terrestrial carbon reservoir mediated in large part by microorganisms. Shotgun metagenome sequencing provides a snapshot of microbial diversity and the frequency of metabolic and functional gene content. Here, we present an analysis of 20 sediment samples collected from the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge to characterize the taxonomic and functional potential of the microbial and viral communities, and reconstructed metagenome-assembled genomes. A total of 122 medium-quality and 6 high-quality MAGs are reported, three of which likely represent a novel species within the class Dehalococcoidia. The most abundant phyla of bacteria and archaea were Proteobacteria and Euryarchaeota, respectively. Caudovirales was the most abundant viral order. Significant differences in taxonomic composition and diversity were observed among collection sites. Additionally, water samples were analyzed for pH, total nitrogen, total organic carbon, elements (P, K, Mg, Fe, Mn, Pb, Ca, S), chloride, electric conductivity, orthophosphate, nitrate, and ammonia, while the sediment samples were analyzed for carbon, nitrogen, and pH. Differences in measured aquatic and sediment analytes revealed significant correlations with numerous phyla. Significant correlations were observed between estimated gene frequencies of both aquatic and sediment analytes, most notably between kup/kdpB and dsrA/cysC with potassium and sulfur, respectively, as well as phoD/phnX and cysC with pH. Together, these data provide an important view into the functional and metabolic potential encoded within the sediment microbial communities in the Florida Everglades. Environmental factors impact the taxonomic diversity of a sediment's microbiome. This study aims to identify possible correlations between specific environmental factors and the microbial diversity found within aquatic sediment samples from the cardinal boundaries of the Loxahatchee Refuge. Prokaryotic communities have been researched extensively in submerged aquatic sediment, and multiple environmental factors are known to strongly influence the taxonomic diversity of a sediment's microbiome 3 . Notable variations in taxonomic diversity can occur with fluctuations in nitrogen concentration, organic carbon content, temperature, redox status, and pH 3 . Notably, a study from Chen 4 demonstrated an increase in prokaryotic diversity near agriculturally dominated drainage sites. The addition of nitrogen to sediment has a direct effect on microbial communities and biomass because higher concentrations of nitrogen showed a decrease in sediment pH 5, 6 which can shift the taxonomic abundance of many bacterial phyla 7 . A negative correlation between nitrogen-based fertilizers and the abundance of Chloroflexi, Cyanobacteria, Firmicutes, and Planctomycetes has previously been reported 8 . Additionally, bacterial community richness and phylogenetic diversity increase at intermediate levels of salinity 9 . While more is known about the diversity of aquatic viral communities, little is known about the diversity of viruses in submerged aquatic sediments. Potentially, the same biochemical factors impacting aquatic viral diversity will similarly affect viruses within the aquatic sediment. A review from Needham 10 found that differences in the diversity of oceanic viral communities are impacted by nutrient availability, UV exposure, water temperature, and physiological properties of the virus and host. A preliminary study has shown that aquatic sediment from areas with differing levels of agricultural runoff do not have significant differences in viral diversity, implying that levels of agricultural runoff are not responsible for changes in viral taxonomic diversity 11 . The second aim of our research is to assemble potentially novel MAGs to expand upon current knowledge of prokaryotic genomics and give public access to these datasets. Currently, no known MAGs have been published from Florida Everglades sediment. Past researchers have developed MAGs from other environments for purposes similar to the goals of this paper. In a study by Xue et al. 12 , prokaryotic MAG sequences were constructed from sediment samples to provide information on specific metabolic pathways and were reported in terms of completeness, contamination, size in base-pairs, GC content, and taxonomy 12 . MAGs were assembled and reported by similar standards in the present study. Our research also aims to address the estimated frequency of genes related to the environmental cycling of C, TN, P, S, and K ( Table 1 ). The genes involved with nitrogen cycling that were analyzed include narG, which is utilized in nitrogen metabolism during dissimilatory nitrate reduction 13 . Furthermore, nifH is utilized in the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia 14 ; however, a negative correlation between nitrite and nitrate with nifH frequency has previously been observed 15 . The gene cbbL is a marker gene in the carbon cycle. Previously, a positive correlation between sediment organic carbon and cbbL abundance was observed 16 , making it possible that there could be a correlation between cbbL and TOC in the water column. Both phoD and phnX are involved with the hydrolysis of organic phosphates and phosphorus cycling. The phoD gene utilizes calcium ions as cofactors to hydrolyze a phosphate monoester and produce a free phosphate and alcohol 17 . Therefore, a positive correlation between the abundance of calcium and the frequency of phoD, and a negative correlation between orthophosphates and frequency of phoD is possible. Moreover, phnX produces phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase which hydrolyzes phosphonoacetaldehyde into a phosphate and an acetaldehyde 18 . Given the release of phosphates, a negative correlation between orthophosphates and the normalized gene values of phnX is possible. Moreover, as magnesium is a cofactor for phnX, a possible positive correlation between magnesium concentration and the normalized gene frequency of phnX might be observed. The KDP-ATPase system can be affected by environmental conditions such as pH and potassium deficiencies in the extracellular environment 19 . The kup and kdpB genes within this system are responsible for potassium transport during cycling. Due to their role in potassium cycling, a positive correlation may exist between the frequency of kdpB and kup and the concentration of potassium in the samples. The dsrA gene is involved in sulfate reduction 20 and acts as a marker gene in microbes involved in sulfur cycling 21 , increasing the likelihood of a positive correlation between the frequency of dsrA and the concentration of sulfur in the water and the sediment. Additionally, it has been observed that cysC was positively correlated with sulfur concentrations in sediment 22 . The mcrA gene is a marker gene involved in the methane metabolism pathway. A positive correlation between the nitrogen concentration and the gene frequency of mcrA, as well as a negative correlation with carbon concentration, have been observed in the wetland's soil 2 . This suggests potential correlations between the abundance of the mcrA gene and the aquatic carbon and nitrogen concentrations. Determining the estimated frequencies of these genes could allow conclusions to be drawn regarding possible anthropogenic influences on the microbiomes and their corresponding cycles. Furthermore, linking gene frequency to the concentration of certain factors at each site could reinforce findings seen in previous literature regarding the prevalence of certain genes in corresponding energy pathways. Shotgun metagenomic sequencing of DNA from twenty sediment samples was performed using the Illumina NovaSeq S4 Sequencing system. A total of 3.29 x10 10 base pairs (bp) were assembled (contigs ≥ 500bp) with an average length of 1.64 x10 8 bp and 4.23 x10 6 contigs per metagenome (Table 1) . Both the IMG pipeline 23 and Kaiju 24 were utilized for metagenome profiling, with IMG assigning taxa based on assembled data and Kaiju assigning taxa based on reads (Fig. 2) . Only minor discrepancies were observed between these two methods ( Supplementary Fig. S1 ). Proteobacteria was the most abundant bacterial phylum at each cardinal boundary with mean frequencies ranging from 0.518 (standard error of the mean (SEM) = 0.002) in the Southern samples to 0.546 (SEM = 0.003) in the Western samples (Fig. 2a) . The most abundant generas were Candidatus Solibacter with a mean frequency of 0.017 (Eastern collection, SEM = <0.001), Anaeromyxobacter with a mean frequency of 0.016 (Northern collection, SEM = 0.002), and Geobacter with mean frequencies of 0.016 and 0.012, respectively (Western collection, SEM = <0.001 & Southern collection, SEM = 0.001) (Fig. 2d /e). These genera were present at all sites. Euryarchaeota was the most abundant archaeal phylum among all samples with the largest mean frequency (within archaea) located at the Eastern sites (0.808, SEM = 0.007) and lowest mean frequency located at the Northern sites (0.653, SEM = 0.016) (Fig. 2c) . Within Euryarchaeota, the most abundant family was Methanoregulaceae with the largest mean frequency at the Southern site (0.240, SEM = 0.039) and lowest mean frequency at the Northern site (0.046, SEM = 0.008). Simpson's diversity (D), Shannon's diversity (He), Pielou's evenness (Je) and Margalef's richness (dMa) indices were used to analyze alpha diversity (Fig. 3 ). All phylum diversity calculations reflect the data generated from both the IMG 23 Alpha diversity analyses were also conducted on prokaryotic genera with a frequency of >.001 (at one or more sites) using data generated by Kaiju 24 (Fig. 3 Supplementary Fig. S2 ). The majority of identified viral genomes belonged to the order Caudovirales, with the exception of samples North 1 and 4, in which the predominant order was Algavirales. Siphoviridae was the most represented family across all samples within the order Caudovirales, followed by Myoviridae and Podoviridae (Fig. 4a) . In North 1 and 3 along with East 2 and 3, Phycodnaviridae was the most represented family, falling within the order Algavirales (Fig. 4a ). Importantly however, these represent only viruses identified based on similarity to reference viral genomes, while a large portion of the viral diversity remain entirely uncharacterized and could have gone undetected here 25 . Actinoplanes phage phiAsp 2 was the most abundant viral strain in the South collections with a mean relative frequency of 0.305 (SEM= 0.143), but was also present at a relatively high abundance in West samples with a mean frequency of 0.133 (SEM= 0.102) (Fig. 4b) . This virus was not found in the North or East samples. Pseudomonas virus NP1 was the most abundant in the South collections, with a mean relative frequency value of 0.179 (SEM= 0.107), and was relatively low in abundance within the other sites. Both of these viruses belong to the family Siphoviridae. Pseudomonas phage PhiPA3 and Myxococcus phage Mx8 were both the most abundant in the North with mean frequency values of 0.141 (SEM=0.063) and 0.142 (SEM=0.037), respectively. Pseudomonas phage PhiPA3 was not as prevalent in any other sites. Myxococcus phage Mx8 was relatively abundant in the East, with a mean frequency of 0.125 (SEM=0.018), but not in the South or West samples. Bathycoccus sp. RCC1105 virus BpV was found to be the most abundant in the East, representing a mean frequency of 0.195 (SEM=0.027), but not present at high frequencies in any of the other locations. Metagenomic binning using the IMG 23 automated pipeline of the submerged sediment samples from the cardinal boundaries yielded 128 total bins: East (37), North (35), South (8) , and West (48) . Six of the bins were high quality (4.69%) and the other 122 bins were medium quality (95.31%) according to the minimum information about metagenome-assembled genomes (MIMAG) standards 26 Table S3 ). Pairwise average nucleotide identity (ANI) was estimated between each HQ bin and its nearest neighbor on a phylogenetic species tree (see Methods). In each comparison, the ANI estimate was <80%, indicating that each HQ bin represents a separate operational taxonomic unit (OTU) from its known neighbors. Additionally, ANI estimates were determined between each pairing of HQ bins 3300038422_25, 3300038550_26, and 3300038558_31, as all were from the North sample site and had the same taxonomic neighbors. The ANI estimate from each of these comparisons was greater than 99.8%, indicating that these three MAGs most likely represent the same OTU. Phylogenetic trees and pangenomes were generated to display the ten closest neighbors for each HQ MAG (Fig. 5 ). Functional analysis was performed using Clusters of Orthologous Groups (COGs). The COG categories in metagenomes from the same cardinal boundaries are ordinated closer to one another ( Fig. 6a /b). Heirarcharcial clustering indicates considerable similarities between COG categories in the Eastern and Western samples (Fig. 6a) , while PCoA indicates that COG categories in the East samples were more similar to the North samples (Fig. 6b ). Most samples were relatively similar in the abundance of RNA processing and modification COGs (Fig. 6c ). PCoA of Genomic Clustering by COG category. (c) COG category cluster analysis based on the relative abundances of each metagenome's protein dataset. The relative abundance of each COG category ranges from a low (blue) to a high (yellow). Different COG Categories: 1, Amino Acid Transport and Metabolism; 2, Carbohydrate Transport and Metabolism; 3, Cell cycle control, cell division, chromosome partitioning; 4, Cell Motility; 5, Cell wall/membrane/envelope biogenesis; 6, Chromatin structure and dynamics; 7, Coenzyme transport and metabolism; 8, Cytoskeleton; 9, Defense Mechanisms; 10, Energy production and conversion; 11, Extracellular structures; 12, Function unknown; 13, General function prediction only;14, Inorganic ion transport and metabolism;15,Intracellular trafficking,secretion, and vesicular transport; 16, Lipid transport and metabolism; 17, Mobilome:prophages, transposons;18, Nucleotide transport and metabolism;19, Post Translational modification, protein turnover; 20, Replication,recombination and repair; 21, RNA processing and modification; 22,Secondary metabolites biosynthesis,transport and catabolism; 23, Signal transduction mechanisms; 24, Transcription; and 25, Translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis. Three water samples were collected from each boundary and were analyzed to compare environmental factors to the relative frequency of genes involved with energy cycling. The three results from each aquatic analyte were averaged for each site in order to complete the Pearson's rank correlation test against estimated gene frequencies. Nitrite and phosphorus were below the detection limit (<0.005 mg/L) in the water samples. Sediment from each metagenomic sample was analyzed for pH, C (%TOC), and N (%TN). A p-value <0.05 was considered statistically significant for this analysis. All results are found in Supplementary Table S2 . Raw pH values are included in Supplementary Table S6 . The most abundant bacterial phyla found within all samples were Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Chloroflexi (Fig. 2a) . Proteobacteria are found in most freshwater environments, as they are able to withstand an array of different temperatures and pressures, emphasizing their role as one of the most versatile and abundant bacterial phyla 27 . Certain Proteobacteria have symbiotic relationships with plant roots, possibly contributing to their high frequencies within these sediment samples 28 . A previous metagenomic study conducted on the eastern side of the interior of the refuge found that the most abundant phyla in submerged sediment samples were Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, and Actinobacteria 2 , while our current study found the three most abundant phyla were Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Actinobacteria. The most common archaeal phyla found within the sediment samples were Euryarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota, and Crenarchaeota. The phylum Euryarchaeota has remained largely unexplored, contributing to the lack of knowledge regarding the biogeographic role of these organisms in terrestrial ecosystems 29 . However, a study of the biological diversity within subtropical coastal wetland sediments observed that the archaeal communities identified consisted primarily of organisms belonging to Euryarchaeota 30 , agreeing with the results of this study. Alpha diversity results show that the South site consistently had lower diversity and evenness in phyla while the North site showed higher diversity and evenness ( Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table S10 ).The southern site was the only site that consisted of mostly sandy sediment (the other sites had less sand were a mud-like consistency), which may have contributed to the diversity and evenness of the prokaryotes within. The North site would likely contain agricultural runoff (the EAA and STA-1W is located just to the North of the collection site) which corroborates with results from Chen 4 . In contrast to the phylum-level analyses, alpha diversity analyses of genera revealed that the South site showed the highest mean values in all indices, while the East site displayed the lowest. Previous studies noted that conditions such as vegetation and historic temperature between the topsoil and subsoil layers can influence the bacterial and archaeal diversity in collections 31, 32 . Although precautions were taken to ensure consistent sampling methods, minor differences in the depth of the cores could have contributed to the differences between the sites. When comparing the alpha diversity results obtained from the IMG 23 pipeline versus Kaiju 24 , the results were relatively similar, with the exception being Margalef's index and results from the southern site (Fig. 3) . Kaiju 24 assessed the richness to be lower than IMG 23 for both the bacterial and archaeal phyla due to 44.7% more bacterial phyla and 40% more archaeal phyla being identified by IMG 23 . In addition, there was a discrepancy between the South results (bacterial phyla) for Simpson's, Shannon's, and Pielou's indices potentially due to the differences in computational methods utilized to measure abundance by Kaiju 24 and IMG 23 (Supplementary Table S10 ). Spearman's analysis showed significant correlations between alpha diversity indexes and water/sediment analytes (Supplementary Table S9a In contrast to the bacteria, the archaeal alpha diversity was not significantly impacted by pH. 7 . Numerous other significant correlations between observed phyla and environmental analytes were found. Aquatic S, EC, Ca, Mg, K, and ammonia in addition to sediment TOC and TN significantly impacted the largest number of phyla ( Supplementary Fig. S4 ). Sediment samples obtained from the South boundary of the refuge exhibited decreased viral diversity and richness in comparison to the East, North, and West samples (Supplementary Fig. S2 ). Our finding of lowered viral diversity in sandy substrates agrees with previous studies 33 . The low viral abundance in the South could also be attributed to the small amount of DNA that was assembled from the samples (Supplementary Fig. S2) . A positive correlation between the phosphate concentration and the rate of viral production has been documented in oceanic surface waters 34 . Our study was unable to replicate these findings, as the South samples had the highest mean concentration of ortho-P but the lowest number of identified viral strains (Supplementary Fig. S2 ). However, it is important to note that viral communities collected by Motegi et al. 34 were extracted from seawater, while the viral communities in this study were extracted from sediment. Viruses belonging to the family Siphoviridae constituted less than 20% of all viruses present in the North and East samples, but 54.6% of the viruses present in the samples obtained from the West and 50.6% of the viruses from the South. One possible explanation for this observation is the decreased frequency of Proteobacteria in the North and East samples, in addition to the increased frequency of Proteobacteria in the West samples (Fig. 2a) . Further, the mean relative frequency of Siphoviridae was highest within the South sediment samples (Fig. 4a) potentially due to the increased frequency of Methanomicrobiaceae (which is preyed upon by Siphoviridae) in these samples (Fig. 2d) . It has been observed that the relative abundance of Siphoviridae correlates with the relative abundance of Methanomicrobia 35 , the class in which Methanomicrobiaceae belongs. Five viral strains emerged in overwhelmingly abundant frequencies. However, these results represent the relative viral abundances of our sediment samples and may not accurately represent the actual viral abundances of the sampling sites. Pseudomonas virus NP1 was one of the five most abundant viruses, found in large frequencies in the South and East sediment samples (Fig. B) . Bathycoccus sp. RCC1105 virus BpV is a marine virus, with close relatives previously observed in freshwater samples, and was found here in abundance primarily at the North and East collection sites (Fig. B) . Although bacteriophages are the most abundant type of virus, their diversity and abundance is difficult to estimate due in part to an absence of standardized metrics 36 ; however, metagenomics has been exceedingly helpful in quantifying their abundance. Actinoplanes phage phiAsp 2 was one of the most abundant phages in the West and South samples, yet not in the North or East (Fig. B) . Phage phiAsp 2 infects the bacterial genus Actinoplanes, which is typically found in sediment 37 . Thus, the presence of phage phiAsp2 in our samples was not unexpected. Myxococcus phage Mx8 targets the bacterium Myxococcus xanthus 38 which has an optimum pH range of 5-8 39 , matching the pH ranges of both the sediment and water samples of this study. Pseudomonas phage phiPA3 was found in only the North samples (Fig. B) and infects the bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These bacteria live in a wide range of environments 40 (Monson, 2011) and ecological niches 41 , making it plausible to be found in the refuge. Metagenome assembly and binning resulted in 128 MAGs ranging across 21 different phyla. Differences between the most abundant taxa identified in the samples and the constructed MAGs show that MAGs are not necessarily representative of the taxonomy in each sample; however, eight of the ten most abundant bacterial phyla (Nitrospirota, Planctomycetota, Bacteroidota, Actinobacteriota, Acidobacteriota, Chloroflexota, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria) and one of the four most abundant archaeal phyla across the samples (Crenarchaeota) were represented as constructed MAGs. A Pearson's rank correlation test found a positive correlation between metagenome size and the number of MAGs assembled from each sample (R=0.779, p<.001). This positive correlation may explain the lower number of MAGs generated from Southern samples, as these samples had the smallest genome sizes and the smallest quantity of MAGs of any site. The results of mapping each HQ bin against all of the metagenomic samples within their respective sites revealed that each displayed >0% mapped reads in at least four out of the five metagenomic samples (Supplementary Table S3 ), suggesting that each HQ MAG is ubiquitous at the cardinal boundary it originated from. ANI analysis revealed that each of the HQ bins represents a different OTU than its closest neighbor; however, these neighbors give the best insight into the biological relevance of these organisms at their respective sample sites. Among the assembled MAGs from the South 5 sample was a bin of the class Lokiarchaeia (bin ID: 3300038663_10), which is part of the Asgard group of organisms. These organisms (Lokiarchaeota, in particular) have provided insight into the emergence of eukaryotes from prokaryotes 42 . Lokiarchaeia has not previously been reported in the Florida Everglades ecosystem; therefore, this constructed MAG from the South sample site represents a novel location for the presence of this group of archaeal organisms. The HQ bin 3300038454_18 from the East 1 metagenome was identified as an OTU within the Archaeal class Methanosarcina. The closest neighbor to this bin as identified by the species tree is Methermicoccus shengliensis DSM 18856. This anaerobic species has previously been identified in the Shengli oilfield in China. The species is known to be thermophilic and can grow at temperatures around 65°C. Additionally, M. shengiensis is methanotrophic and was found to have increased growth with the addition of sludge 43 . The other HQ bin from the East 1 metagenome (3300038454_19) was assigned to the archaeal class Thermoplasmata_A. The nearest taxonomic neighbor observed on the species tree is Methanomassiliicoccus luminyensis B10, a methanogen that produces methane gas via the reduction of methanol and oxidation of hydrogen. The HQ bin 3300038549_3 from South 2 was identified to be from the class Blastocatellia. The species tree revealed the bin's closest neighbor to be Pyrinomonas methylaliphatogenes, an aerobic, heterotrophic, moderately acidophilic, and thermophilic bacterium. It has been proposed that P. methylaliphatogenes scavenges for hydrogen when there is a lack of organic electron donors, therefore contributing to hydrogen cycling 44 . The three HQ MAGs from the North sample sites (3300038422_25, 3300038550_26, and 3300038558_31) were shown to be part of the same OTU following the results of ANI analysis (all three had ANI >99%). This indicates the presence of a prominent organism of the bacterial class Dehalococcoidia that is unique to the North site, as it could not be mapped to any of the other sample sites in notable amounts. Also, the separate assembly of this OTU from multiple metagenomic samples (North 3, 4, and 5) indicates that it is unlikely that this MAG was developed as a result of an assembly error. The closest taxonomic neighbors to this OTU were Dehalogenimonas lykanthroporepellens, Dehalogenimonas alkenigignens, and Dehalococcoides mccartyi. These bacterial species are relevant to the degradation of chlorinated organics in contaminated environments via reductive dechlorination or dehalogenation 45 . However, a preliminary analysis indicated these MAGs do not contain the reductive dehalogenase markers TIGR02486 or pfam13486. The North samples appeared to be the most distinct in context of COG categories (Fig. 6 ). This dissimilarity might be attributed to runoff entering the North site from STA 46 , Lake Okeechobee, residential areas, and the EAA. Although significant correlations were observed between estimated gene frequency and water parameters, it should be stated that water movement, inconsistency in the water column, and change over time will gradually alter sediment composition and the microbiome within. Also, the correlations stated in this section are based upon estimated gene frequency rather than gene activity. The results showed a positive correlation between nifH and ammonia (R=0.795, p<0.001), possibly due to the activity of nitrogen fixating genes which can increase ammonia levels in the water 47 . Of the studied genes, nifH had the smallest normalized values, which may be a result from the lack of direct contact with atmospheric nitrogen utilized by nifH. Further, the positive correlation between narG and ammonia (R=0.672, p=0.001) could be due to narG's role in dissimilatory nitrate reduction 13 . Despite the presence of iron-sulfate clusters in narG 48 , our results showed a negative correlation between sulfur (R=-0.598, p=0.005) and narG. This may be due to the measurement accounting for environmental sulfur in the water and not the sediment. The positive correlations between normalized values of phoD and aquatic (R=0.633 p=0.003) and sediment (R=0.484, p=0.042) pH are supported by previous findings that pH is a significant environmental factor in bacterial expression of the phoD gene 49 . We anticipated a positive correlation between calcium and phoD, similar to findings that phoD activity was enhanced through calcium supplementation 50 ; however, our results demonstrated a negative correlation between phoD and Ca (R=-0.610 p=0.004). This difference may be explained by the previous study 50 utilizing recombinant phoD genes whereas our study examined wildtype phoD. The negative correlation between the concentration of ortho-P in the water column and phnX (R=-0.730 p<0.001) could be due to a decreased demand for organic phosphate decomposition while in the presence of ortho-P, as the gene is activated in conditions of phosphate deficiency 51 . This assertion, however, is challenged by the positive correlation between phoD and ortho-P concentrations (R=0.571 p=0.009). As phoD has a similar role in organic phosphate decomposition to phnX, we expected the genes to have complementary relationships with ortho-P. A significant positive correlation was found between dsrA and pH of both the water (R=0.622, p=0.003) and the sediment (R=0.543, p=0.02), but a direct causal relationship could not be elucidated from this study. A positive correlation was observed between cysC and aquatic sulfur concentration (R=0.528, p=0.02), possibly due to the role of cysC in reducing sulfate to sulfide 22 . A significant negative correlation was found between kdpB abundance and potassium concentration (R=-0.782, p<0.001). This may be due to kdpB's key role in potassium cycling, as a low concentration of available potassium would lead to more organisms needing to uptake as much potassium as possible 52 . Our results found a significant positive correlation between kup abundance and the pH of the water column (R=0.659, p=0.002) , however, a significant correlation was not observed with the sediment pH. A negative correlation was observed between kup and potassium (R=-0.467, p=0.04) potentially due to water nutrient levels not representing the nutrient levels in the sediment where the gene abundance was derived. Furthermore, a significant negative correlation was observed between kup and Ca (R=-0.768, p<0.001), in contrast to previous findings that Ca sensors could mechanistically link abiotic stress in plants and the microbiome to several K+ uptake systems including kup 53, 54 . The positive correlation between cbbL and ammonia (R=0.765, p<0.001) may be attributed to the high abundance of cbbL in wetland environments. Wetlands tend to have higher ammonia concentrations due to a lack of oxygen preventing nitrogen conversion 55 . The positive correlation between mcrA and ammonia (R=0.834, p<0.001) is potentially due to ammonia acting as an inhibitor of McrA 56 . The positive correlation between mcrA and K (R=-0.701, p<0.001) may be because available K is a significant influence on methanogenic communities, including those involving mcrA 57 . PCoA analysis of the kup/kdpB and dsrA/cysC gene pairs found strong similarities in clustering when comparing to the PCoA analysis of all ten genes involved in this study ( Supplementary Fig. S3 ). It is possible that potassium and sulfur are important elemental factors driving the functional profile of this environment. Significant correlations in the frequency of several genes and the pH of both the sediment/water were observed, suggesting that pH is also an important factor. Multiple methods were utilized to obtain taxonomic classifications. Although discrepancies were present, each method demonstrated similar results. Both methods resulted in approximately 50% of the sample remaining unidentified, indicating further studies are needed to truly examine the taxonomic diversity within sediment samples. There is an evident need for consistent, in-depth computational methods to more clearly explore and study the phage/viral abundance, distribution, and gene coverage in natural ecosystems. With the construction of well-established methods and metrics, novel phage characterizations and behavioral descriptions are likely to result. Additionally, it was not possible to fully characterize the alpha diversity at the genus-level due to computational limitations that prevented the identification of the genera found in frequencies less than 0.01%. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the laboratory space that contained the sediment samples was inaccessible. After DNA extraction, these sediment samples were left for a period of time while drying, possibly altering the quantities of C, N, and pH present in the samples before analysis. Additionally, the Pearson's correlation test relied on analytes from the water above the sediment samples and thus may not accurately reflect the levels within the sediment at the exact time of collection. Furthermore, the fluid nature of the environment makes replication of this experiment difficult. While the MAG trees and analysis were comprehensive, they do not provide a full picture of the ecosystem the samples were gathered in. In order to obtain a full picture of the environment, the three sections of this paper must be examined in conjuncture. The microbiome results reported within this study have greatly expanded upon the current collection of metagenomic data from the Everglades ecosystem. The analyses within this study have determined both consistencies and distinctions between the taxonomic diversity of the microbiomes at each of the four cardinal boundary sample sites of the Loxahatchee refuge. A number of specific, potentially novel microorganisms were also identified via MAG assembly. Significant correlations were found between the water/sediment analytes and the taxonomic abundance, alpha diversity and gene frequency of the microbiomes. Genes related to sulfur and potassium cycling were the most similar to the overall PCoA analysis conducted, and therefore have a large impact on the energy cycling processes in the environment while pH, %TN, and %TOC had significant impacts on overall microbiome diversity. Observable differences in the microbiomes of the refuge canals will continue to experience longterm changes due to past, present, and future anthropogenic influences. Future research is required to expand upon the taxonomic diversity, gene abundance, and the prokaryotic genomic profile of the Everglades microbiome. The taxonomic profiles reported in this study can serve as a basis for further research conducted on the Everglades ecosystem. All samples were collected from the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in Palm Beach County, Florida, on February 2, 2020. Sediment was collected using a coring device from a depth of ~0.6m. Five samples were collected from each of the cardinal boundaries 20-40 cm apart (twenty samples total). All samples were taken from the inner bank of the canal except Lox North 1, taken on the outer bank of the refuge. Three water samples (~1.5L) were taken from each site. Each site had similar weather, wind speed, and air temperature (Supplementary Table S7 ). The North collection site had primarily tall, grass-like vegetation with a few trees growing on the banks. The East site had an abundance of tall vegetation and thick reeds, but was much denser and more difficult to find shallow water suitable for collecting sediment samples. The South and West collection sites were similar with dense patches of reeds, and flora visible just beneath the surface. Sediment from the North, East, and West sites were similar with a thick, mud-like consistency and abundant plant matter, while sediment from the South had a large amount of sand/shells but less plant material (differences could be due to the construction of three impoundment areas for water management purposes by the Army Corps of Engineers in the late 1950s, consisting of a series of levees and canals 58 . Sediment samples were sieved through 2mm sterilized mesh. The recommended protocol for the QIAGEN DNeasy® PowerSoil® Kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) for DNA extraction was utilized for all samples on the same day as the collection. Frozen/thawed sediment samples from the West site underwent an additional, modified extraction process two weeks after collection due to low DNA content during initial extraction. In this modified procedure, samples containing 1.5x the amount of sediment were centrifuged for twice as long and bead-beated for 1.7x longer than recommended. All water analyses (pH, TN, TOC, elements P, K, Mg, Fe, Mn, Pb, Ca, S, chloride, electric conductivity, ortho-phosphate, nitrate, and ammonia) were completed at the University of Florida/IFAS Everglades Research and Education Center (Belle Glade, FL). A Fisher Scientific Accument AB250 pH meter (Waltham, United States) was used for pH measurement. Standard pH buffers (20mL; pH 4, 7 and 10) were used for calibration. Ten mL of each water sample was analyzed until a constant pH was recorded. A Shimadzu (Kyoto, Japan) TOC-L analyzer was utilized (TNOC method) for TN and TOC measurement. The TN & TOC standards, quality control (QC) standards, and 40ml of each water sample were utilized in the analysis. ICP-OES was used for testing each element using the EPA 200.7 method 59 . A colorimeter equipped with 15 mm tubular flow cell and 480 nm filters was used to measure chloride concentration using the EPA 325.2 method 60 . A conductivity bridge, range 1 to 1000 µmho per centimeter, 5.2 conductivity cell, cell constant 1.0 or micro dipping type cell with 1.0 constant YSI #3403 or equivalent, and a 5.3 thermometer were used to measure electrical conductivity with the EPA 120.1 method 61 . An automated continuous flow analyzer was used for the analysis of ortho-phosphate concentration, nitrate concentration, and ammonia. Ortho-phosphate concentration was measured following the EPA 365.1 method 62 . Nitrate (NO3-N) with cadmium reduction was completed utilizing the EPA 353.3 method 63 . Ammonia (NH3-N) was measured utilizing the EPA 350.1 method 64 . All sediment analyses (pH, %TOC, %TN) were completed at the Stable Isotopes for Biosphere Science Laboratory, Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Texas A&M University. Sifted sediment samples were dried to a constant weight and ground to fine powder using Retesch Oscillating Mixer Mill MM400 (Haan, Germany). Soil pH was determined by using an Accumet Basic pH meter (Denver Instrument, Arvada, CO, USA) on a 1:2 solution of soil in a 0.01 M CaCl2 solution 65 . The samples were analyzed for %TOC and %TN using the Costech Elemental Combustion System (Costech Analytical Technologies, Santa Clarita, CA, USA) coupled to a Thermo Conflo IV Interface (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) and a Thermo Scientific Delta V Advantage Stable Isotope Mass Spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). The NIST plant standard Apple1515 was used to calculate the Nitrogen and Carbon concentrations (%). Carbon isotope ratios and %TOC were measured using acid-treated samples. Samples weighed in silver capsules were left with hydrochloric fume in a dessicator for 8 hours. After they are tested for residual carbonate, they were dried at 60C for 12 hours. Full results of the analysis are found in Supplementary Table S6a and S6b. The mean value of each aquatic analyte (n=3) and sediment analyte (n=5, with exceptions for the pH-see Supplementary Table 6Sb ) was utilized for the analysis of each cardinal boundary. The Illumina NovaSeq 6000 platform (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) was used for metagenome sequencing using the S4 Regular flowcells and generated 6.24E+09 filtered reads with 9.05E+11 filtered bp. BBDuk (version 38.79) 66 was used to trim and remove reads. Reads mapped with BBMap 66 to contaminants were separated. The final filtered fastq files were error corrected using BBCms (version 38.44) 66 . The readset was then assembled using metaSPAdes (version 3.13.0) 67 . The input read set was mapped to the final assembly and coverage information generated with BBMap (version 38.44) 66 . BBDuk (version 38.79) 66 was used to remove contaminants, trim reads that contained adapter sequences, right quality trim reads where quality drops to 0, and remove reads that contained 4 or more 'N' bases, had an average quality score across the read less than 3, or had a minimum length <= 51 bp or 33% of the full read length. Reads mapped with BBMap 66 to masked human, cat, dog, and mouse references at 93% identity were separated into a chaff file, as well as reads aligned to common microbial contaminants. The final filtered fastq files were error corrected using BBCms (version 38.44) 66 using the command line options mincount=2 and highcountfraction=0.6.The readset was then assembled using metaSPAdes (version 3.13.0) 67 using the following command line options: --only-assembler -k 33,55,77,99,127 --meta. The input read set was mapped to the final assembly and coverage information generated with BBmap (version 38.44) 66 using the following command line options: bbmap.sh ambiguous=random. Assembled metagenomes were processed through the DOE-JGI Metagenome Annotation Pipeline and loaded into the Integrated Microbial Genome & Microbiomes platform (IMG/M) 23 . Sample metadata is available through the Genomes OnLine Database (GOLD) 68 . Taxonomic data was obtained with the JGI IMG portal 23 . The total amount of estimated gene copies of the phyla and families were counted for each metagenome. The normalized (estimated) frequency of each was found by dividing the estimated phylum/family count for a specific classification by the total estimated count for all the phyla/families from the given metagenome. Additionally, Kaiju (version 1.1.2) 24 on KBase 69 was also utilized to establish taxonomic assignments using the unassembled, filtered metagenomes. Using data derived from Kaiju 24 and IMG 23 , newick tree files were generated for phyla/families/genera using the NCBI Taxonomy Browser 70,71 found at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Taxonomy/CommonTree/wwwcmt.cgi. Repeats were eliminated. The resulting taxonomic cladograms were visualized using iTOL (version 4) 72 . For each tree, the abundance of each taxonomic assignment was represented by compiling the datasets for the individual samples at the four cardinal boundaries and entered utilizing the iTOL Annotation Editor 72 . Simpson's Index D, Shannon's Index, Pielou's Index, and Margalef's Index were calculated with the phylogenetic distribution of genes from the IMG portal 23 utilizing "by BLAST percent identities" as well as phylogenetic estimates from Kaiju (version 1.1.2) 24 . Genome bins were identified using the metagenome binning tool, MetaBAT 73 . A consensus lineage was determined per bin using the IMG taxonomy of individual contigs, and contigs with a different phylum assignment than the consensus were removed. GTDBTK lineage was also assigned using GTDB-tk (version 0.2.2) with the GTDB database (release 86) 74 . Genome completeness and contamination were estimated using CheckM (version 1.0.12) based on the recovery of core single-copy marker genes 75 . The bins were sorted into High, Medium, and Low quality and reported according to the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC)-compliant Minimum Information on a Metagenome-Assembled Genome (MIMAG) 26 . Individual high quality MAG trees were constructed utilizing KBase 69 . The high quality MAG assemblies were downloaded from IMG 23 and then run through the app "Annotate Microbial Assembly" 76 to convert the FASTA file into a genome file. The genome was then run through the app "Insert Genome into Species Tree-v2.2.0" 77 utilizing the following settings: "Neighbor Public Genome Count" = 10 and "Copy Public Genomes to Workspace" = yes. The resulting newick file was then uploaded to iTOL (version 4) and edited in the iTOL annotation editor 72 . Pearson's correlation tests were used to analyze relationships between the normalized frequencies of each phyla assigned from the IMG pipeline and average concentration of each analyte in the water and actual values for the sediment samples. Spearman's correlation tests were utilized to analyze the relationships between the taxonomic abundance of phyla along with alpha diversity means against the average concentration of each analyte in the water and actual values for the sediment samples. These statistical analyses along with all stacked bar and box/whisker charts were performed/created by Graphpad Prism version 8.4.2 for Windows (GraphPad Software, San Diego, California USA, www.graphpad.com). The JGI IMG pipeline 23 was utilized to generate MAGs from the sequenced data. Genome bins were identified with the automated metagenome binning tool, MetaBAT (version 2.12.1) 73 . Each MAG was manually exported from the JGI IMG portal 23 and uploaded to KBase 69 to construct phylogenetic trees and uploaded to iTOL (version 4) 72 . A pairwise ANI calculation was performed between each HQ bin and its nearest taxonomic neighbor as visualized in the species tree output using the KBase 69 application "Compute ANI with FastANI" with default settings 78 . The KBase application "Align Reads using Bowtie2-v2.3.2" was used to determine the raw count and percent of mapped reads for each genome bin 79 . All settings were "default". Pangenomes for each HQ MAG were created utilizing the genome sets created when running "Insert Genome into Species Tree" (version 2.2.0) 80 . These genome sets were then used to calculate the pangenome utilizing "Build Pangenome with OrthoMCL" (version 2.0) 81 and then visualized utilizing "Pangenome Circle Plot" (version 1.2.0) 81 with all settings "default". The genomes of all samples were clustered using the JGI IMG database "Compare Genomes'" function under "Genome Clustering" via hierarchical clustering and grouped by COG categories 23 . The data generated was exported as a newick file, uploaded into iTOL (version 4) 72 , and displayed as an unrooted tree (Fig. 6a) . Metagenomes were analyzed using the JGI IMG database "Compare Genomes" function, comparison via PCoA 23 . Data was exported to Altius Institute's 'CubeMaker' (https://tools.altiusinstitute.org/cubemaker/#) to generate Fig. 6b and Supplementary Fig. S3 . Data used to generate the COG category heatmap (Fig. 6c) were obtained on the JGI website by examining the overview of each genome 23 . A table of estimated gene counts and percent total of the different COG categories was recorded for each metagenome. The percent total of each specific COG category was then uploaded to Heatmapper Expression with average linkage and separated using the Euclidean distance method (http://www.heatmapper.ca/expression/) 82 . Each gene included in this study was identified from the sample sites using their KEGG Orthology (KO), and the estimated abundance of each gene (>30% identity) was found by matching genes with reference genes on the IMG platform 23 . Normalized gene values were derived by dividing the number of estimated gene copies for each gene from each sample site by the total number of genes assembled in each metagenome and were used as gene frequencies. Pearson's correlation tests were used to analyze relationships between the gene frequencies and average concentration of each analyte in the water and sediment samples. 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(Methods for the Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes Determination of Ammonia Nitrogen by Semi-Automated Colorimetry: method 350.1, revision 2.0 Models relating soil pH measurements in water and calcium chloride that incorporate electrolyte concentration BBTools software package A. metaSPAdes: a new versatile metagenomic assembler Genomes OnLine database (GOLD) v.7: updates and new features KBase: The United States Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase Database resources of the National Center for Biotechnology Information Interactive Tree Of Life (iTOL) v4: recent updates and new developments MetaBAT, an efficient tool for accurately reconstructing single genomes from complex microbial communities GTDB-Tk: a toolkit to classify genomes with the Genome Taxonomy Database CheckM: assessing the quality of microbial genomes recovered from isolates, single cells, and metagenomes The RAST Server: Rapid Annotations using Subsystems Technology FastTree 2 -Approximately Maximum-Likelihood Trees for Large Alignments High throughput ANI analysis of 90K prokaryotic genomes reveals clear species boundaries Fast gapped-read alignment with Bowtie 2 FastTree 2 -Approximately Maximum-Likelihood Trees for Large Alignments OrthoMCL: Identification of Ortholog Groups for Eukaryotic Genomes Heatmapper: web-enabled heat mapping for all The authors would like to thank the Joint Genome Institute for their ongoing, generous support and help. The work conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No.DE-AC02-05CH11231. We would like to thank the Sid Kyle Endowed Chair in Arid and Semiarid Land Biogeochemistry from the Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology (Texas A&M University) for sediment analysis as well as Dr. Ayumi Hyodo, Dr. Ulrich Stingl (UF), Dr. Willm Martens-Habbena (UF) and Ivica Letunic (iTOL) for their support and advice. Additionally, we would like to thank Dr. Abul Rabbany and the University of Florida-Soil, Water, and Nutrient Management Lab in Belle Glade, Florida for facilitating a portion of the analytical work. Lastly, we would like to thank the Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge for granting us access to collect water and sediment samples. All questions and correspondence should be sent to Jon Benskin (jonathan.benskin@palmbeachschools.org). The authors declare no competing interests.