Bacteria in gel probes: comparison of the activity of immobilized sulfate-reducing bacteria with in situ sulfate reduction in a wetland sediment

被引:15
作者
Edenborn, HM [1 ]
Brickett, LA [1 ]
机构
[1] US DOE, Pittsburgh Energy Technol Ctr, Pittsburgh, PA 15236 USA
关键词
gel probes; immobilized bacteria; mine drainage; sulfate reduction; remediation;
D O I
10.1016/S0167-7012(01)00261-5
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
A novel method was used to examine the microbial ecology of iron-rich wetland sediments receiving neutral-pH coal mine drainage. Gel probes inserted into the sediments allowed analysis of the distribution and activity of bacterial sulfate reduction (BSR). A mixed population of sulfate-reducing bacteria enriched from anoxic wetland sediments was immobilized in low temperature-gelling agarose held in grooved rods or probes. The probes were inserted vertically into sediments and were allowed to incubate in situ for 48 h. After their retrieval, the gels were sectioned and analyzed for residual BSR activity and were compared to in situ BSR rates and chemical porewater profiles. The depth distribution of residual BSR activity in the immobilized cell gel probes differed significantly from the BSR measured in situ. Approximately 51% of the total integrated residual sulfate reduction activity measured in the gel probes occurred between 0 and 7 cm of the upper 20 cm of sediment. In contrast, ca. 99% of the integrated in situ BSR occurred between 7- and 20-cm depth, and only 1% of the total integrated rate occurred between 0- and 7-cm depth. Lactate-enriched bacteria immobilized in the gel may have been atypical of the majority of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the sediment. Agarose-immobilized sulfate-reducing bacteria might also be able to proliferate in the otherwise inhospitable zone of iron reduction, where sulfate and labile carbon compounds for which they are usually outcompeted can diffuse freely into the gel matrix. Gel probes containing particulate iron monosulfide (FeS) indicated that FeS remained stable in sediments at depths greater than 2 to 3 cm below the sediment-water interface, consistent with the shallow penetration of oxygen into surface sediments. Published by Elsevier Science B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:51 / 62
页数:12
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