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1.
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   

2.
Molecular mechanisms and gene regulation are of interest in the area of geomicrobiology in which the interaction between microbes and minerals is studied. This paper focuses on the regulation of the expression of carbonic anhydrase (CA) genes in Bacillus mucilaginosus and the effects of the expression product of the B. mucilaginosus CA gene in Escherichia coli on calcite weathering. Real-time fluorescent quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) was used to explore the relationship between CA gene expression in B. mucilaginosus and promotion of calcite dissolution under condition of Ca2+ deficiency. The results showed that adding calcite to the medium, which lacks Ca2+, can up-regulate the expression of the bacterial CA genes to accelerate calcite dissolution for bacterial growth. CA genes from B. mucilaginosus were transferred into E. coli by cloning. We then employed crude enzyme extract from the resultant E. coli strain in calcite dissolution experiments. The enzyme extract promoted calcite dissolution. These findings provide direct evidence for the role of microbial CA on mineral weathering and mineral nutrition release.  相似文献   

3.
Z. Zeng  M. M. Tice 《Geobiology》2014,12(4):362-371
Iron‐bearing early diagenetic carbonate cements are common in sedimentary rocks, where they are thought to be associated with microbial iron reduction. However, little is yet known about how local environments around actively iron‐reducing cells affect carbonate mineral precipitation rates and compositions. Precipitation experiments with the iron‐reducing bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR‐1 were conducted to examine the potential role of cells in promoting precipitation and to explore the possible range of precipitate compositions generated in varying fluid compositions. Actively iron‐reducing cells induced increased carbonate mineral saturation and nucleated precipitation on their poles. However, precipitation only occurred when calcium was present in solution, suggesting that cell surfaces lowered local ferrous iron concentrations by adsorption or intracellular iron oxide precipitation even as they locally raised pH. Resultant precipitates were a range of thermodynamically unstable calcium‐rich siderites that would likely act as precursors to siderite, calcite, or even dolomite in nature. By modifying local pH, providing nucleation sites, and altering metal ion concentrations around cell surfaces, iron‐reducing micro‐organisms could produce a wide range of carbonate cements in natural sediments.  相似文献   

4.
Two morphotypes of Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann 1902) Hay et al. 1967, types A and B, known to be unequally distributed in the oceans, were grown in dilution cultures at a range of photon flux densities (PFDs) (1.5–155 μmol photons·m?2·s?1) and two temperatures (10° and 15° C). Calcite carbon and organic carbon content of the cells as well as instantaneous growth rate, cell size, chlorophyll fluorescence, and light-scatter properties clearly depended on growth conditions and differed considerably for the two morphotypes. The ratio between calcite carbon and organic carbon production showed an optimum of 0.65 in E. huxleyi type A cells at PFD = 17.5. The ratio increased slightly with a temperature increase from 10° to 15°C but remained < 1.0 at both temperatures in light-limited cells. In contrast, calcite carbon production exceeded organic carbon production (ratio: 1.4–2.2) in phosphate-deprived cultures. Emiliania huxleyi type B generally showed a higher calcite carbon/organic carbon ratio than E. huxleyi type A, but the relation with PFD was similar. The content of calcite carbon and organic carbon as well as the instantaneous growth rate, cell size, chlorophyll fluorescence, and light-scatter properties showed large diel variations that were closely related to the division cycle. Our results show the importance of mapping the structure of any sampled cell population with respect to the phase in the cell division cycle, as this largely determines the outcome of not only “per cell” measurements but also short time (less than 24 h) flux measurements. For instance, dark production of calcite by E. huxleyi was negatively affected by cell division. Slowly growing (phosphate-stressed) cultures produced calcite in the light and in the dark. In contrast, rapidly growing cultures at 10°C produced calcite only in the light, whereas in the dark there was a significant loss of calcite due to dissolution.  相似文献   

5.
Ocean acidification will disproportionately impact the growth of calcifying organisms in coral reef ecosystems. Simultaneously, sponge bioerosion rates have been shown to increase as seawater pH decreases. We conducted a 20‐week experiment that included a 4‐week acclimation period with a high number of replicate tanks and a fully orthogonal design with two levels of temperature (ambient and +1 °C), three levels of pH (8.1, 7.8, and 7.6), and two levels of boring sponge (Cliona varians, present and absent) to account for differences in sponge attachment and carbonate change for both living and dead coral substrate (Porites furcata). Net coral calcification, net dissolution/bioerosion, coral and sponge survival, sponge attachment, and sponge symbiont health were evaluated. Additionally, we used the empirical data from the experiment to develop a stochastic simulation of carbonate change for small coral clusters (i.e., simulated reefs). Our findings suggest differential impacts of temperature, pH and sponge presence for living and dead corals. Net coral calcification (mg CaCO3 cm?2 day?1) was significantly reduced in treatments with increased temperature (+1 °C) and when sponges were present; acidification had no significant effect on coral calcification. Net dissolution of dead coral was primarily driven by pH, regardless of sponge presence or seawater temperature. A reevaluation of the current paradigm of coral carbonate change under future acidification and warming scenarios should include ecologically relevant timescales, species interactions, and community organization to more accurately predict ecosystem‐level response to future conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Stalactites and moonmilk from Sahastradhara caves in Siwalik Himalayas were studied to understand the role of microbes in their genesis. Fourier spectroscopy in the moonmilk indicates a complex milieu of organic compounds that is unusual for inorganic formations. Stable C and O isotopes show trends in the moonmilk and stalactite, which suggest biogenic input; the geochemical inference is consistent with evidence from microscopy and laboratory-based microbial cultures. Light microscopy of moonmilk samples show the presence of a number of microbial forms similar to Cyanobacteria, and scanning electron microscope (SEM) images show microbial structures similar to Spirulina. The total number of microbial cells using SYBR Gold is 6.5 × 105 cells, g sed?1in moonmilk and 3.2 × 105 cells, g sed?1 in stalactites. FISH indicates approximately 3.5 × 105 cells, g sed?1 in moonmilk and 2 × 105 cells, g sed?1 in stalactites. SEM images of the moonmilk indicate a large network of microbial filaments along with minerals, which are identified as calcite based on their x-ray diffraction pattern. In vitro laboratory cultures with pure monogenic strains isolated from the moonmilk and stalactites raise pH in the medium, which facilitate calcite precipitation. The mineral precipitating isolates were identified as: Bacillus pumilis, B. cereus, B. anthracis, B. lentus, B. sphaericus, B. circulans and Actinomycetes. The Sahastradhara moonmilk and statactites are colonized by a diverse microbial community and the isolated bacterial strains induce biomineralization on different nutrient media, supporting their biogenic origin.  相似文献   

7.
Competition experiments were performed in a continuous-flow reactor using Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, a type II methanotroph, and Methylomonas albus BG8, a type I methanotroph. The experiments were designed to establish conditions under which type II methanotrophs, which have significant cometabolic potential, prevail over type I strains. The primary determinants of species selection were dissolved methane, copper, and nitrate concentrations. Dissolved oxygen and methanol concentrations played secondary roles. M. trichosporium OB3b proved dominant under copper and nitratelimited conditions. The ratio of M. trichosporium to M. albus in the reactor increased ten-fold in less than 100 hours following the removal of copper from the reactor feed. Numbers of M. albus declined to levels that were below detection limits (<106/ml) under nitrogen-limited conditions. In the latter experiment, the competitive success of M. trichosporiumdepended on the maintenance of an ambient dissolved oxygen level below about 7.5 × 10–5 M, or 30% of saturation with air. The ability of M. trichosporium to express soluble methane monooxygenase under copper limitation and nitrogenase under nitrate limitation was very significant. M. albus predominated under methane-limited conditions, especially when low levels of methanol were simultaneously added with methane to the reactor. The results imply that nitrogen limitation can be used to select for type II strains such as M. trichosporium OB3b. Offprint requests to: Pierre Servais  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Mercury sulfides (cinnabar and metacinnabar) are the main ores of Hg and are relatively stable under oxic conditions (Ksp = 10?54 and 10?52, respectively). However, until now their stability in the presence of micro‐organisms inhabiting acid mine drainage (AMD) systems was unknown. We tested the effects of the AMD microbial community from the inoperative Hg mine at New Idria, CA, present in sediments of an AMD settling pond adjacent to the main waste pile and in a microbial biofilm on the surface of this pond, on the solubility of crystalline HgS. A 16S rRNA gene clone library revealed that the AMD microbial community was dominated by Fe‐oxidizing (orders Ferritrophicales and Gallionellas) and S‐oxidizing bacteria (Thiomonas sp.), with smaller amounts (≤6%) being comprised of the orders Xanthomondales and Rhodospirillales. Though the order Ferritrophicales dominate the 16S rRNA clones (>60%), qPCR results of the microbial community indicate that the Thiomonas sp. represents ~55% of the total micro‐organisms in the top 1 cm of the AMD microbial community. Although supersaturated with respect to cinnabar and metacinnabar, microcosms inoculated with the AMD microbial community were capable of releasing significantly more Hg into solution compared to inactivated or abiotic controls. Four different Hg‐containing materials were tested for bacterially enhanced HgS dissolution: pure cinnabar, pure metacinnabar, mine tailings, and calcine material (processed ore). In the microcosm with metacinnabar, the presence of the AMD microbial community resulted in an increase of dissolved Hg concentrations up to 500 μg L‐1 during the first 30 days of incubation. In abiotic control microcosms, dissolved Hg concentrations did not increase above 100 ng L?1. When Hg concentrations were below 50 μg L‐1, the Fe‐oxidizing bacteria in the AMD microbial community were still capable of oxidizing Fe(II) to Fe(III) in the AMD solution, whereas concentrations above 50 μg L?1 resulted in inhibition of microbial iron oxidation. Our experiments show that the AMD microbial community contributes to the dissolution of mercury sulfide minerals. These findings have major implications for risk assessment and future management of inoperative Hg mines worldwide.  相似文献   

10.
Potentiometric titrations are an effective tool to constrain the protonation constants and site concentrations for microbial surface ligands. Protonation models developed from these experiments are often coupled with data from metal adsorption experiments to calculate microbial ligand-metal binding constants. Ultimately, the resulting surface complexation models can be used to predict metal immobilization behavior across diverse chemical conditions. However, most protonation and metal-ligand thermodynamic constants have been generated in laboratory experiments that use cultured microbes which may differ in their chemical reactivity from environmental samples. In this study, we investigate the use of in situ field potentiometric titrations of microbial mats at a carbonate hot spring located at Fairmont Hot Springs, British Columbia, with the aim to study microbial reactivities in a natural field system. We found that authigenic carbonate minerals complicated the potentiometric titration process due to a “carbonate spike” introduced by the contribution of inorganic carbonate mineral dissolution and subsequent carbonate speciation changes during the transition from low to high pH. This inhibits the determination of microbial surface ligand variety and concentrations. Our preliminary study also highlights the need for developing novel probes to quantify in situ microbial mat reactivity in future field investigations.  相似文献   

11.
Abundance, isotopic composition and morphological imprints of the planktonic foraminifera Globorotalia scitula (Brady) were closely examined for possible use as a novel reconstruction tool of chemical environments in sub-intermediate depth seawater in the past. Based on the MOCNES plankton tow observation of dwelling depths of G. scitula and the isotopic compositions together with hydrochemistry data, the empirical relations between isotopic disequilibria in carbon (Δδ13C=δ13CG. scitulaδ13CDIC) and oxygen (Δδ18O=δ18OG. scitulaδ18Ow) isotopes in the carbonate tests and the seawater δ18O and δ13C of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), respectively, are introduced. The morphological information such as pore density and porosity is also examined for significant relations to carbonate chemistry. Shell porosity is strongly correlated saturation state of calcite. The dissolution of living G. scitula tests may promote the observed isotopic differences as well as the increases in porosity. Δδ18O of G. scitula is found effectively to be linear function of both water temperature and calcite saturation state (Ω), and thereby temperature equation for G. scitula is provided, while Δδ13C of G. scitula is a linear function of only calcite saturation state.The equation was validated by using Globorotalia scitula collected by a sediment trap in intermediate water depths. Satisfactory agreements were found between observed and calculated Δδ18O from the empirical equations based on temperature and hydrochemistry data at sediment trap deployment site, indicating that the equation may be useful in paleo-environmental reconstruction of sub-intermediate water. The sediment trap observation further suggests that the abundance of G. scitula does not necessarily correspond to surface water productivity and to POC flux, but instead, it correlates well with the supply of fine organic matter, which appears to be a result of water convection. Thus, G. scitula may be an unambiguous and excellent paleo-environmental recorder for carbonate chemistry and for fine organic matter transport to the depths, if isotopic and morphological observations are combined.  相似文献   

12.
Magnesium content, strongly correlated with temperature, has been developed as a climate archive for the late Holocene without considering anatomical controls on Mg content. In this paper, we explore the ultrastructure and cellular scale Mg‐content variations within four species of North Atlantic crust‐forming Phymatolithon. The cell wall has radial grains of Mg‐calcite, whereas the interfilament (middle lamella) has grains aligned parallel to the filament axis. The proportion of interfilament and cell wall carbonate varies by tissue and species. Three distinct primary phases of Mg‐calcite were identified: interfilament Mg‐calcite (mean 8.9 mol% MgCO3), perithallial cell walls Mg‐calcite (mean 13.4 mol% MgCO3), and hypothallium Mg‐calcite (mean 17.1 mol% MgCO3). Magnesium content for the bulk crust, an average of all phases present, showed a strongly correlated (R2 = 0.975) increase of 0.31 mol% MgCO3 per °C. Of concern for climate reconstructions is the potential for false warming signals from undetected postgrazing wound repair carbonate that is substantially enriched in Mg, unrelated to temperature. Within a single crust, Mg‐content of component carbonates ranged from 8 to 20 mol% MgCO3, representing theoretical thermodynamic stabilities from aragonite‐equivalent to unstable higher‐Mg‐calcite. It is unlikely that existing current predictions of ocean acidification impact on coralline algae, based on saturation states calculated using average Mg contents, provide an environmentally relevant estimate.  相似文献   

13.
The impact of indigenous microorganisms on the mineral corrosion and mineral trapping in the SO2 co-injected CO2-saline-sandstone interaction was investigated in this study by lab experiments under 55?°C, 15?M pa. The results verified that co-injection of SO2 resulted in a decrease in biomass and shifts in microbial communities within 90?days, but some microorganisms still could adapt to acidic, high-temperature, high-pressure, and high-salinity environments. Firmicutes and Proteobacteria remained dominant phylum, but phylum Proteobacteria showed better tolerance to the co-injection of SO2 in the initial period. In the SO2 co-injected CO2-saline-sandstone interaction under microbial mediation, acid-producing bacteria further promoted the corrosion of K-feldspar, albite, and clay minerals, meanwhile mobilizing more K+, Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+ into solution. The acidogenic effect may be linked to the dominant genus of Bacillus, Paenibacillus, Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas and Exiguobacterium. Co-injection of SO2 inhibited the carbonates capture, while microbial acid production further reduced the pH, further inhibiting carbonates capture. As a result, no secondary carbonate (e.g., calcite) was observed on a short time scale within 90?days. So, microbial acidogenic effect was not conducive to carbonates capture in short term.  相似文献   

14.
Geochemical environments were characterized for 14 sites along the northern Gulf of Mexico continental shelf and upper slope, in an effort to examine the relationship between sediment geochemistry and carbonate shell taphonomy in a long-term study—Shelf and Slope Experimental Taphonomy Initiative (SSETI). Three groups of environments of preservation (seep, near-seep, and shelf-and-slope) were identified based on their geochemical characteristics (i.e., oxygen uptake rate and penetration depth, pore-water saturation states, and carbonate dissolution fluxes). Diffusive oxygen uptake rate increased in the order of shelf-and-slope, near-seep, and seep, although carbonate dissolution flux did not show significant correlation with O2 flux, presumably due to non-diffusive behavior at some sites. Using pore-water saturation indices with respect to aragonite and calcite and sedimentation rates, we defined a semi-quantitative parameter, carbonate dissolution index (CDI), to predict carbonate preservation potential during the taphonomic processes. Our limited database suggests that both the seep and the shelf-and-slope sediments may have higher carbonate preservation potential than the near-seep sediments.  相似文献   

15.
The susceptibility of various bacteriogenic iron oxides (BIOS) to bacterial Fe(III) reduction was examined. Reduction resulted in complete dissolution of the iron mineral from the surfaces of the Fe-oxidizing consortium. Reduction rates were compared to that of synthetic ferrihydrite (HFO). The reduction rate of HFO (0.162 day? 1) was significantly lower than that of Äspö (Gallionella dominated) BIOS (0.269 day? 1). Two Canadian (Leptothrix dominated) BIOS samples showed statistically equivalent rates of reduction (0.541 day?1 and 0.467 day? 1), which were higher than both Äspö BIOS and HFO. BIOS produced by different iron-oxidizing genera have different susceptibilities to microbial reduction.  相似文献   

16.
Ocean acidification and warming will be most pronounced in the Arctic Ocean. Aragonite shell‐bearing pteropods in the Arctic are expected to be among the first species to suffer from ocean acidification. Carbonate undersaturation in the Arctic will first occur in winter and because this period is also characterized by low food availability, the overwintering stages of polar pteropods may develop into a bottleneck in their life cycle. The impacts of ocean acidification and warming on growth, shell degradation (dissolution), and mortality of two thecosome pteropods, the polar Limacina helicina and the boreal L. retroversa, were studied for the first time during the Arctic winter in the Kongsfjord (Svalbard). The abundance of L. helicina and L. retroversa varied from 23.5 to 120 ind m?2 and 12 to 38 ind m?2, and the mean shell size ranged from 920 to 981 μm and 810 to 823 μm, respectively. Seawater was aragonite‐undersaturated at the overwintering depths of pteropods on two out of ten days of our observations. A 7‐day experiment [temperature levels: 2 and 7 °C, pCO2 levels: 350, 650 (only for L. helicina) and 880 μatm] revealed a significant pCO2 effect on shell degradation in both species, and synergistic effects between temperature and pCO2 for L. helicina. A comparison of live and dead specimens kept under the same experimental conditions indicated that both species were capable of actively reducing the impacts of acidification on shell dissolution. A higher vulnerability to increasing pCO2 and temperature during the winter season is indicated compared with a similar study from fall 2009. Considering the species winter phenology and the seasonal changes in carbonate chemistry in Arctic waters, negative climate change effects on Arctic thecosomes are likely to show up first during winter, possibly well before ocean acidification effects become detectable during the summer season.  相似文献   

17.
This article discusses aspects of biofouling and corrosion in the thermo-fluid heat exchanger (TFHX) and in the cooling water system of a nuclear test reactor. During inspection, it was observed that >90% of the TFHX tube bundle was clogged with thick fouling deposits. Both X-ray diffraction and Mössbauer analyses of the fouling deposit demonstrated iron corrosion products. The exterior of the tubercle showed the presence of a calcium and magnesium carbonate mixture along with iron oxides. Raman spectroscopy analysis confirmed the presence of calcium carbonate scale in the calcite phase. The interior of the tubercle contained significant iron sulphide, magnetite and iron-oxy-hydroxide. A microbiological assay showed a considerable population of iron oxidizing bacteria and sulphate reducing bacteria (105 to 106 cfu g?1 of deposit). As the temperature of the TFHX is in the range of 45–50°C, the microbiota isolated/assayed from the fouling deposit are designated as thermo-tolerant bacteria. The mean corrosion rate of the CS coupons exposed online was ~2.0 mpy and the microbial counts of various corrosion causing bacteria were in the range 103 to 105 cfu ml?1 in the cooling water and 106 to 108 cfu ml?1 in the biofilm.  相似文献   

18.
Moonmilk, a microcrystalline secondary cave deposit, actively forms on the floor of Krem Mawmluh – a limestone cave in Meghalaya, Northeastern India. Due to the abundance of micrite and calcified microbial filaments, we hypothesize that these deposits form as a result of ongoing microbial interactions. Consistent with this idea, we report electron microscopic and microbiological evidences for the biological origin of moonmilk in Krem Mawmluh. Scanning electron microscopy indicated abundant calcified microbial filaments, needle calcite, fibre calcites (micro-fibre and nano-fibre calcite crystals), biofilm and microbial filaments in the moonmilk. The total viable culturable microbes showed high population densities for microbes in the moonmilk and moonmilk pool waters. In vitro culture experiments, confirmed the capability of many of the isolated strains to precipitate calcite and some of the identified isolates belonged to the Bacillus sp. and Actinomycetes. These results clearly support the biogenic nature of the deposits.  相似文献   

19.
The precipitation of calcite from a calcium bicarbonate solution, similar in ionic strength to natural hardwaters, was observed in a series of experiments utilizing an automated culture apparatus. Seeded growth experiments, using calcite seed crystals, were performed at a range of phosphate concentrations to observe inhibitory effects. These experiments demonstrated a linear relationship of increasing inhibition with increasing initial phosphate concentration. A further series of experiments was performed in which an actively photosynthesizing culture of a unicellular green alga (Chlorococcum sp.) was added to the culture vessel in order to initiate precipitation. Experiments to observe spontaneous precipitation, occurring in the absence of both seed and alga additions, were carried out to compare with precipitation rates in the algal experiments. A control experiment was also performed to investigate whether precipitation occurrred in algal cultures maintained in darkness. The carbonate site mechanistic model, developed for calcite precipitation in abiotic conditions, was used to analyse the results of the algal experiments and found to be applicable.  相似文献   

20.
Increased atmospheric CO2 emissions are inducing changes in seawater carbon chemistry, lowering its pH, decreasing carbonate ion availability and reducing calcium carbonate saturation state. This phenomenon, known as ocean acidification, is happening at a faster rate in cold regions, i.e., polar and sub-polar waters. The larval development of Arbacia dufresnei from a sub-Antarctic population was studied at high (8.0), medium (7.7) and low (7.4) pH waters. The results show that the offspring from sub-Antarctic populations of A. dufresnei are susceptible to a development delay at low pH, with no significant increase in abnormal forms. Larvae were isometric between pH treatments. Even at calcium carbonate (CaCO3) saturation states (of both calcite and aragonite, used as proxies of the magnesium calcite) <1, skeleton deposition occurred. Polar and sub-polar sea urchin larvae can show a certain degree of resilience to acidification, also emphasizing A. dufresnei potential to poleward migrate and further colonize southern regions.  相似文献   

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