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1.
The dissolution rate of apatite was determined in batch reactors in organic acid solutions and in microbial cultures. Inoculum for the cultures was from biotite plus apatite crystals from a granite weathering profile in South Eastern Australia. In both the biotic and the abiotic experiments, etching of the apatite surface leads to the formation of elongated spires parallel to the c axis. Apatite dissolution rates in the inorganic, acetate, and oxalate solutions increase as pH decreases from approximately 10 -11 mol/m -2 · s -1 at initial pH 5.5 to 10 -7 mol/m -2 · s -1 at initial pH 2. Under mildly acidic to near neutral pH conditions, both oxalate and acetate increased apatite dissolution by up to an order of magnitude compared to the inorganic conditions. Acetate catalyzed the reaction by forming complexes with Ca, either in solution or at the mineral surfaces. Oxalate forms complexes with Ca as well, and can also affect reaction rates and stoichiometry by forming Ca-oxalate precipitates, thus affecting solution saturation states. In all abiotic experiments, net phosphate release to solution approaches zero even when solutions are apparently undersaturated by several orders of magnitude with respect to the solubility of an ideal fluoroapatite mineral. In the microbial experiments, two enrichment cultures increased both apatite and biotite dissolution by producing organic acids, primarily pyruvate, fermentation products, and oxalate, and by lowering bulk solution pH to between 3 and 5. However, the microorganisms were also able to increase phosphate release from apatite (by two orders of magnitude) without lowering bulk solution pH by producing pyruvate and other compounds.  相似文献   

2.
Subsurface karst aquifers receiving sulfidic water can host complex chemolithotrophic microbial communities that are capable of dissolving limestone, forming new karstic habitat. Neutrophilic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria use reduced sulfur compounds as energy rich substrate, potentially producing sulfuric acid as a geochemically reactive byproduct. The physicochemical relationship between a biofilm forming on a limestone surface and the extent of microbial influence on dissolution rate, however, are unknown. We investigated the rate of Madison limestone dissolution by sulfur-oxidizers both in the field at Lower Kane Cave, WY (LKC), and in the laboratory using continuous flow culture reactors and microbial mat collected from LKC. In the field, a microbial consortium rapidly colonized limestone chips forming a thick biofilm, with deep etching of mineral surfaces underneath. In the laboratory we found that a microbial biofilm oxidizing thiosulfate on the limestone surface accelerated dissolution rate up to 7 times faster than the abiotic baseline rate. In contrast, experiments done with H2S or a mixture of H2S and thiosulfate had no effect on dissolution rate. We hypothesize that the laboratory mat community dominated by Thiothrix sp. oxidizes thiosulfate to sulfate and H+, while H2S is partially oxidized to S°. When all sulfur substrate is withheld, the community oxidizes stored intracellular sulfur, briefly accelerating limestone dissolution even in the absence of external supplied substrate. Accelerated corrosion occurs only in the reactive micro-environment under the biofilm, disconnected from the bulk reactor solution. When experiments are repeated where the microbial population is separated from the limestone by a dialysis membrane barrier, measured pH drop is greater, but there is only slight enhancement of rate. This work confirms our working hypothesis that neutrophilic sulfur-oxidizers colonize and rapidly dissolve limestone surfaces, possibly to buffer the production of excess acidity.  相似文献   

3.
Direct Observation of Microbial Inhibition of Calcite Dissolution   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Vertical scanning interferometry (VSI) provides a method for quantification of surface topography at the angstrom to nanometer level. Time-dependent VSI measurements can be used to study the surface-normal retreat across crystal and other solid surfaces during dissolution or corrosion processes. Therefore, VSI can be used to directly and nondestructively measure mineral dissolution rates with high precision. We have used this method to compare the abiotic dissolution behavior of a representative calcite (CaCO3) cleavage face with that observed upon addition of an environmental microbe, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, to the crystal surface. From our direct observations, we have concluded that the presence of the microbes results in a significant inhibition of the rate of calcite dissolution. This inhibition appears to be a 2nd-order effect that is related to the formation of etch pits. The opening of etch pits was greatly inhibited in the presence of added bacteria, suggesting that the bacterial cells exert their effect by inhibiting the formation of etch pits at high-energy sites at the crystal surface caused by lattice defects, e.g., screw or point dislocations. The experimental methodology thus provides a nondestructive, directly quantifiable, and easily visualized view of the interactions of microbes and minerals during weathering (or corrosion) processes or during mineral precipitation.  相似文献   

4.
Pyrosequencing-based analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed a significant correlation between apatite dissolution and the abundance of betaproteobacteria on apatite surfaces, suggesting a role for the bacteria belonging to this phylum in mineral weathering. Notably, the cultivation-dependent approach demonstrated that the most efficient mineral-weathering bacteria belonged to the betaproteobacterial genus Burhkolderia.  相似文献   

5.
Minerals constitute an ecological niche poorly investigated in the soil, in spite of their important role in biogeochemical cycles and plant nutrition. To evaluate the impact of minerals on the structure of the soil bacterial communities, we compared the bacterial diversity on mineral surfaces and in the surrounding soil. Three pure and calibrated minerals (apatite, plagioclase and a mix of phlogopite-quartz) were buried into the organo-mineral layer of a forest soil. After a 4-year incubation in soil conditions, mineral weathering and microbial colonization were evaluated. Apatite and plagioclase were the only two significantly weathered minerals. The analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences generated by the cloning-sequencing procedure revealed that bacterial diversity was higher in the surrounding soil and on the unweathered phlogopite-quartz samples compared with the other minerals. Moreover, a multivariate analysis based on the relative abundance of the main taxonomic groups in each compartments of origin demonstrated that the bacterial communities from the bulk soil differed from that colonizing the minerals. A significant correlation was obtained between the dissolution rate of the minerals and the relative abundance of Beta-proteobacteria detected. Notably, many sequences coming from bacteria colonizing the mineral surfaces, whatever the mineral, harbored high similarity with efficient mineral weathering bacteria belonging to Burkholderia and Collimonas genera, previously isolated on the same experimental site. Taken together, the present results provide new highlights concerning the bacterial communities colonizing minerals surfaces in the soil and suggests that the minerals create true ecological niches: the mineralosphere.  相似文献   

6.
Although microbes have been shown to alter the dissolution rate of carbonate minerals, a mechanistic understanding of the consequences of microbial surface colonization on carbonate dissolution has yet to be achieved. Here we report the use of vertical scanning interferometry (VSI) to study the effect of Shewanella oneidensis MR‐1 surface colonization on the dissolution rates of calcite (CaCO3) and dolomite (CaMg(CO3)2) through qualitative analysis of etch pit development and quantitative measurements of surface‐normal dissolution rates. By quantifying and comparing the significant processes occurring at the microbe–mineral interface, the dominant mechanism of mineral dissolution during surface colonization was determined. MR‐1 attachment under aerobic conditions was found to influence carbonate dissolution through two distinct mechanistic pathways: (1) inhibition of carbonate dissolution through interference with etch pit development and (2) excavation of carbonate material at the cell–mineral interface during irreversible attachment to the mineral surface. The relative importance of these two competing effects was found to vary with the solubility of the carbonate mineral studied. For the faster‐dissolving calcite substrates, inhibition of dissolution by attachment and subsequent extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) production was the dominant effect associated with MR‐1 surface colonization. This interference with etch pit development resulted in a 40–70% decrease in the surface normal dissolution rate relative to cell‐free controls, depending primarily on the concentration of cells in solution. However, in the case of the slower‐dissolving dolomite substrates, carbonate material displaced during the entrenchment of cells on the surface far outweighed the abiotic dissolution rate. Therefore, during the initial stages of surface colonization, dolomite dissolution rates were actually enhanced by MR‐1 attachment. This study demonstrates the dynamic and competitive relationship between microbial surface colonization and mineral dissolution that may be expected to occur in natural environments.  相似文献   

7.
The relative contributions of abiotic and microbial processes and the role of dissolved species in the reductive dechlorination of carbon tetrachloride (CT) by natural soils and sediments were investigated. Microcosms were constructed using soils or sediments and site water from three locations, and then amended with electron acceptors and/or donors to stimulate the growth of iron- and sulfate-reducing bacteria and to promote the formation of minerals that can react with CT. Before spiking with CT, half the replicate microcosms were sterilized in order to measure the rates of abiotic CT transformation without any direct contribution from microbial dechlorination. Abiotic reaction rates were significantly greater than microbial rates for a range of initial CT concentrations, and for both iron- and sulfate-reducing conditions. In most cases, abiotic reaction rates were indistinguishable from total reaction rates (abiotic plus microbial), indicating a negligible microbial contribution to CT transformation. While in most microcosms the soil/sediment acted as the abiotic reductant, under certain conditions the supernatant was more reactive with CT than was the solid phase. For these conditions, we propose that the reactive species in the supernatant consisted of aqueous natural organic matter that underwent reduction or other transformation by S(-II) generated by sulfate-reducing bacteria.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidation of pyrite in cultures of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans (A.f) was studied. The experiments were performed at an initial pH of 2.5 at 28°C. The concentrations of total dissolved iron in solution and the pH were monitored during the first 36 days. Pyrite surfaces were examined by scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive spectrometry (SEM-EDS) after 100 days. The concentrations of total dissolved iron and hydrogen ions increased significantly in the presence of bacteria. SEM examination indicated that the crystal surfaces were subjected to two types of dissolution phenomena. Cracks were observable on the of crystal surfaces under both biotic and abiotic conditions, whereas rounded and polygonal pits appeared additionally on the surfaces under biotic conditions. The co-occurrence of the rounded and polygonal pits on the crystal surfaces and the presence of A.f at the pyrite surface suggests that A.f promotes pyrite oxidation by a contact mechanism. We propose that the rounded and polygonal pits be considered to represent a practical biosignature for tracing the evolution of microbial iron oxidation in the remote past.  相似文献   

9.
Silicate minerals can be a source of calcium and alkalinity, enabling CO2 sequestration in the form of carbonates. For this to occur, the mineral needs to be first dissolved in an acidifying process such as the biological process of anaerobic fermentation. In the present study, the main factors which govern the dissolution process of an alkaline silicate mineral (wollastonite, CaSiO3) in an anaerobic fermentation process were determined. Wollastonite dissolution kinetics was measured in a series of chemical batch experiments in order to be able to estimate the required amount of alkaline silicate that can neutralize the acidifying fermentation process. An anaerobic fermentation of glucose with wollastonite as the neutralizing agent was consequently performed in a fed-batch reactor. Results of this experiment were compared with an abiotic (control) fed-batch reactor in which the fermentation products (i.e. organic acids and alcohols) were externally supplied to the system at comparable rates and proportions, in order to provide chemical conditions similar to those during the biotic (fermentation) experiment. This procedure enabled us to determine whether dissolution of wollastonite was solely enhanced by production of organic acids or whether there were other impacts that fermentative bacteria could have on the mineral dissolution rate. The established pH profiles, which were the direct indicator of the dissolution rate, were comparable in both experiments suggesting that the mineral dissolution rate was mostly influenced by the quantity of the organic acids produced.  相似文献   

10.
Chemical weathering of fluorine-bearing minerals is widely accepted as the main mechanism for the release of fluorine (F) to groundwater. Here, we propose a potential mechanism of F release via microbial dissolution of fluorapatite (Ca5(PO4)3F), which has been neglected previously. Batch culture experiments were conducted at 30°C with a phosphate-solubilizing bacteria strain, Pseudomonas fluorescens P35, and rock phosphates as the sole source of phosphate for microbial growth in parallel with abiotic controls. Rock phosphates consisted of 55–91% of fluorapatite and 5–10% of dolomite before microbial dissolution as indicated by X-ray diffraction (XRD). Mineral composition and morphology changed after microbial dissolution characterized by the disappearance of dolomite and the development of etched cavities on rock phosphate surfaces. The pH of media used was approximately 7.4 at the beginning and increased gradually to 7.7 in abiotic controls; with the inoculum, the pH decreased to acidic values of 3.7–3.8 after 27 h. Phosphate, calcium, and fluoride were released from the rock phosphate to the acidified medium. At 42 h, the concentration of F reached 8.1–10.3 mg L?1. The elevated F concentration was two times higher than the F levels in groundwater in regions diagnosed with fluorosis, and was toxic to the bacteria, as demonstrated by a precipitous decrease in live cells. Geochemical modeling demonstrated that the oxidation of glucose (the carbon source for microbial growth in the medium) to gluconic acid could decrease the pH to 3.7–3.8 and result in the dissolution of fluorapatite and dolomite. Dolomite and fluorapatite remained unsaturated, while concentrations of dissolved phosphorus (P), calcium (Ca), and F increased throughout the time course Fluorite reached saturation [saturation index (SI) 0.22–0.42] after 42 h in rock phosphate–amended biotic systems. However, fluorite was not detected in XRD patterns of the final residue from microcosms. Given that phosphate-solubilizing bacteria are ubiquitous in soil and groundwater ecosystems, they could play an important role in fluorapatite dissolution and the release of F to groundwater.  相似文献   

11.
A novel technique (“bioshrouding”) for safeguarding highly reactive sulfidic mineral tailings deposits is proposed. In this, freshly milled wastes are colonised with ferric iron-reducing heterotrophic acidophilic bacteria that form biofilms on reactive mineral surfaces, thereby preventing or minimising colonisation by iron sulfide-oxidising chemolithotrophs such as Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and Leptospirillum spp. Data from initial experiments showed that dissolution of pyrite could be reduced by between 57 and 75% by “bioshrouding” the mineral with three different species of heterotrophic acidophiles (Acidiphilium, Acidocella and Acidobacterium spp.), under conditions that were conducive to microbial oxidative dissolution of the iron sulfide.  相似文献   

12.
G. Saini  C. S. Chan 《Geobiology》2013,11(2):191-200
Microbial survival in mineralizing environments depends on the ability to evade surface encrustation by minerals, which could obstruct nutrient uptake and waste output. Some organisms localize mineral precipitation away from the cell; however, cell surface properties – charge and hydrophobicity – must also play a role in preventing surface mineralization. This is especially relevant for iron‐oxidizing bacteria (FeOB), which face an encrustation threat from both biotic and abiotic mineralization. We used electron microscopy and surface characterization techniques to study the surfaces of two stalk‐forming neutrophilic FeOB: the marine Zetaproteobacterium Mariprofundus ferrooxydans PV‐1 and the recently isolated freshwater Betaproteobacterium Gallionellales strain R‐1. Both organisms lack detectable iron on cell surfaces. Live and azide‐inhibited M. ferrooxydans PV‐1 cells had small negative zeta potentials (?0.34 to ?2.73 mV), over the pH range 4.2–9.4; Gallionellales strain R‐1 cells exhibited an even smaller zeta potential (?0.10 to ?0.19 mV) over pH 4.2–8.8. Cells have hydrophilic surfaces, according to water contact angle measurements and microbial adhesion to hydrocarbons tests. Thermodynamic and extended Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek (XDLVO) calculations showed that as low charge causes low electrostatic attraction, hydrophilic repulsion dominates cell–mineral interactions. Therefore, we conclude that surface properties help enable these FeOB to survive in highly mineralizing environments. Given both mineral‐repelling surface properties and the ability to sequester Fe(III) biominerals in an organomineral stalk, these two FeOB have a well‐coordinated system to localize both biotic and abiotic mineral distribution.  相似文献   

13.
In order to better understand the bioleaching mechanism, expression of genes involved in energy conservation and community structure of free and attached acidophilic bacteria in chalcopyrite bioleaching were investigated. Using quantitative real-time PCR, we studied the expression of genes involved in energy conservation in free and attached Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans during bioleaching of chalcopyrite. Sulfur oxidation genes of attached A. ferrooxidans were up-regulated while ferrous iron oxidation genes were down-regulated compared with free A. ferrooxidans in the solution. The up-regulation may be induced by elemental sulfur on the mineral surface. This conclusion was supported by the results of HPLC analysis. Sulfur-oxidizing Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans and ferrous-oxidizing Leptospirillum ferrooxidans were the members of the mixed culture in chalcopyrite bioleaching. Study of the community structure of free and attached bacteria showed that A. thiooxidans dominated the attached bacteria while L. ferrooxidans dominated the free bacteria. With respect to available energy sources during bioleaching of chalcopyrite, sulfur-oxidizers tend to be on the mineral surfaces whereas ferrous iron-oxidizers tend to be suspended in the aqueous phase. Taken together, these results indicate that the main role of attached acidophilic bacteria was to oxidize elemental sulfur and dissolution of chalcopyrite involved chiefly an indirect bioleaching mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Bacillus subtilis endospore‐mediated forsterite dissolution experiments were performed to assess the effects of cell surface reactivity on Mg isotope fractionation during chemical weathering. Endospores present a unique opportunity to study the isolated impact of cell surface reactivity because they exhibit extremely low metabolic activity. In abiotic control assays, 24Mg was preferentially released into solution during forsterite dissolution, producing an isotopically light liquid phase (δ26Mg = ?0.39 ± 0.06 to ?0.26 ± 0.09‰) relative to the initial mineral composition (δ26Mg = ?0.24 ± 0.03‰). The presence of endospores did not have an apparent effect on Mg isotope fractionation associated with the release of Mg from the solid into the aqueous phase. However, the endospore surfaces preferentially adsorbed 24Mg from the dissolution products, which resulted in relatively heavy aqueous Mg isotope compositions. These aqueous Mg isotope compositions increased proportional to the fraction of dissolved Mg that was adsorbed, with the highest measured δ26Mg (?0.08 ± 0.07‰) corresponding to the highest degree of adsorption (~76%). The Mg isotope composition of the adsorbed fraction was correspondingly light, at an average δ26Mg of ?0.49‰. Secondary mineral precipitation and Mg adsorption onto secondary minerals had a minimal effect on Mg isotopes at these experimental conditions. Results demonstrate the isolated effects of cell surface reactivity on Mg isotope fractionation separate from other common biological processes, such as metabolism and organic acid production. With further study, Mg isotopes could be used to elucidate the role of the biosphere on Mg cycling in the environment.  相似文献   

15.
The importance of metals to life has long been appreciated. Iron (Fe) is the fourth most abundant element overall, and the second most abundant element that is redox-active in near-surface aqueous habitats, rendering it the most important environmental metal. While it has long been recognized that microorganisms participate in the global iron cycle, appreciation for the pivotal role that redox cycling of iron plays in energy conservation among diverse prokaryotes has grown substantially in the past decade. In addition, redox reactions involving Fe are linked to several other biogeochemical cycles (e.g., carbon), with significant ecological ramifications. The increasing appreciation for the role of microbes in redox transformations of Fe is reflected in a recent surge in biological and environmental studies of microorganisms that conserve energy for growth from redox cycling of Fe compounds, particularly in the deep ocean. Here we highlight some of the key habitats where microbial Fe-oxidation plays significant ecological and biogeochemical roles in the oceanic regime, and provide a synthesis of recent studies concerning this important physiological group. We also provide the first evidence that microbial Fe-oxidizing bacteria are a critical factor in the kinetics of mineral dissolution at the seafloor, by accelerating dissolution by 6–8 times over abiotic rates. We assert that these recent studies, which indicate that microbial Fe-oxidation is widespread in the deep-sea, combined with the apparent role that this group play in promoting rock and mineral weathering, indicate that a great deal more attention to these microorganisms is warranted in order to elucidate the full physiological and phylogenetic diversity and activity of the neutrophilic Fe-oxidizing bacteria in the oceans.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Enrichment culture of hot spring water samples with pyrite as substrate has provided acidophiles with novel growth characteristics: with these bacteria, the range of conditions under which rapid microbial oxidation of mineral sulphides has been demonstrated has been extended. The upper temperature limit for bacterial mineral oxidation in reactors has been raised. The dissolution of pyrite occurred during growth of Sulfolobus -like thermophiles up to almost 90C. The most efficient extraction of copper from chalcopyrite occurred at 80–85C. With moderate thermophiles, rapid oxidation of minerals was obtained during autotrophic growth in the absence of supplemental CO2: a mixed enrichment culture was active in pyrite dissolution at 45–50C in reactors gassed only with air which contrasted with poor growth by well-studied moderate thermophiles in the absence of enhanced CO2 concentrations.  相似文献   

17.
Organic carbon degradation experiments were carried out using flow-through reactors with sediments collected from an intertidal freshwater marsh of an eutrophic estuary (The Scheldt, Belgium). Concentrations of nitrate, nitrite, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), dissolved organic carbon, methane, dissolved cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+ and K+), total dissolved Fe, phosphate and alkalinity were measured in the outflow solutions from reactors that were supplied with or without the terminal electron acceptor nitrate. Organic carbon mineralization rates were computed from the release rates of DIC after correcting for the contribution of carbonate mineral dissolution. The experiments ran for several months until nitrate reducing activity could no longer be detected. In the reactors supplied with nitrate, 10–13% of the bulk sedimentary organic carbon (SOC) was mineralized by the end of the experiments. In reactors receiving no nitrate, only 3–9% of the initial SOC was mineralized. Organic matter utilization by nitrate reducers could be described as the simultaneous degradation of two carbon pools with different maximum oxidation rates and half-saturation constants. Even when nitrate was supplied in non-limiting concentrations about half of the carbon mineralization in the reactors was due to fermentative processes, rather than being coupled to nitrate respiration. Fermentation may thus be responsible for a large fraction of the DIC efflux from organic-rich, nearshore sediments.  相似文献   

18.
The attachment of microorganisms onto biotic surfaces to form biofilm structures on the support media of a biofilter has great impact on biodegradation systems. This study examined the composition of the microbial community that developed on grape seeds (GS) used as support media in methanol degradation biofilters. They were analyzed using conventional microbiology techniques and API galleries. Analysis of microbial counts showed that, in GS before methanol exposure, bacteria and filamentous fungi were predominant over yeasts. In contrast, GS exposed to methanol exhibited more bacteria and yeasts than fungi. Most of the Gram-negative bacteria were the Pseudomonas genus, Bacillus staerothermophilus, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, and Bacillus pumilus. Rhodotorula mucilaginosa was the primary yeast found. The filamentous fungi Aspergillus sp. Cladosporium cladosporioides, Fusarium sp., and Alternaria sp. were also detected. No Gram-positive bacteria growth was found on GS exposed to methanol. Using scanning electron microscopy, biofilm formation on the GS was examined to reveal the presence of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic microorganisms as biomass accumulation was visible on the seeds. Seeds exposed to methanol for 90 days showed a mature biofilm with cuticle and epidermal layer decline, as well as biofilm dissolution into grape seed integuments.  相似文献   

19.
Vertical scanning interferometry (VSI) provides a method for quantification of surface topography at the angstrom to nanometer level. Time-dependent VSI measurements can be used to study the surface-normal retreat across crystal and other solid surfaces during dissolution or corrosion processes. Therefore, VSI can be used to directly and nondestructively measure mineral dissolution rates with high precision. We have used this method to compare the abiotic dissolution behavior of a representative calcite (CaCO(3)) cleavage face with that observed upon addition of an environmental microbe, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, to the crystal surface. From our direct observations, we have concluded that the presence of the microbes results in a significant inhibition of the rate of calcite dissolution. This inhibition appears to be a 2nd-order effect that is related to the formation of etch pits. The opening of etch pits was greatly inhibited in the presence of added bacteria, suggesting that the bacterial cells exert their effect by inhibiting the formation of etch pits at high-energy sites at the crystal surface caused by lattice defects, e.g., screw or point dislocations. The experimental methodology thus provides a nondestructive, directly quantifiable, and easily visualized view of the interactions of microbes and minerals during weathering (or corrosion) processes or during mineral precipitation.  相似文献   

20.
Carbonate rocks at marine methane seeps are commonly colonized by sulfur-oxidizing bacteria that co-occur with etch pits that suggest active dissolution. We show that sulfur-oxidizing bacteria are abundant on the surface of an exemplar seep carbonate collected from Del Mar East Methane Seep Field, USA. We then used bioreactors containing aragonite mineral coupons that simulate certain seep conditions to investigate plausible in situ rates of carbonate dissolution associated with sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. Bioreactors inoculated with a sulfur-oxidizing bacterial strain, Celeribacter baekdonensis LH4, growing on aragonite coupons induced dissolution rates in sulfidic, heterotrophic, and abiotic conditions of 1773.97 (±324.35), 152.81 (±123.27), and 272.99 (±249.96) μmol CaCO3 • cm−2 • yr−1, respectively. Steep gradients in pH were also measured within carbonate-attached biofilms using pH-sensitive fluorophores. Together, these results show that the production of acidic microenvironments in biofilms of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria are capable of dissolving carbonate rocks, even under well-buffered marine conditions. Our results support the hypothesis that authigenic carbonate rock dissolution driven by lithotrophic sulfur-oxidation constitutes a previously unknown carbon flux from the rock reservoir to the ocean and atmosphere.Subject terms: Microbial ecology, Water microbiology, Biogeochemistry, Biogeochemistry, Biofilms  相似文献   

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