Microbial Mineral Weathering for Nutrient Acquisition Releases Arsenic
- 15 April 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 75 (8) , 2558-2565
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.02440-07
Abstract
Tens of millions of people in Southeast Asia drink groundwater contaminated with naturally occurring arsenic. How arsenic is released from the sediment into the water remains poorly understood. Here, we show in laboratory experiments that phosphate-limited cells of Burkholderia fungorum mobilize ancillary arsenic from apatite. We hypothesize that arsenic mobilization is a by-product of mineral weathering for nutrient acquisition. The released arsenic does not undergo a redox transformation but appears to be solubilized from the apatite mineral lattice during weathering. Analysis of apatite from the source area in the Himalayan basin indicates the presence of elevated levels of arsenic, with an average concentration of 210 mg/kg. The rate of arsenic release is independent of the initial dissolved arsenic concentration and occurs at phosphate levels observed in Bangladesh aquifers. We also demonstrate the presence of the microbial phenotype that releases arsenic from apatite in Bangladesh aquifer sediments and groundwater. These results suggest that microbial mineral weathering for nutrient acquisition could be an important mechanism for arsenic mobilization.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arsenic release from biotite into a Holocene groundwater aquifer in BangladeshApplied Geochemistry, 2008
- Enhanced geochemical gradients in a marine shallow-water hydrothermal system: Unusual arsenic speciation in horizontal and vertical pore water profilesApplied Geochemistry, 2007
- Multistate Evaluation of an Ultrafiltration-Based Procedure for Simultaneous Recovery of Enteric Microbes in 100-Liter Tap Water SamplesApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2007
- Effect of the Mycorrhizosphere on the Genotypic and Metabolic Diversity of the Bacterial Communities Involved in Mineral Weathering in a Forest SoilApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2007
- Climate change and Late Pliocene acceleration of erosion in the HimalayaPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Spatial variability of arsenic in 6000 tube wells in a 25 km2 area of BangladeshWater Resources Research, 2003
- Determination of uranium and thorium in apatite minerals by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry with solvent extraction separation into diisobutyl ketoneAnalytica Chimica Acta, 2000
- Phosphate solubilizing bacteria and their role in plant growth promotionBiotechnology Advances, 1999
- Methods for recovery of deep terrestrial subsurface sediments for microbiological studiesJournal of Microbiological Methods, 1989
- Some special problems in the determination of viable counts of groundwater microorganismsMicrobial Ecology, 1988