Edwards K J, Gihring T M, Banfield J F
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 1999 Aug;65(8):3627-32. doi: 10.1128/AEM.65.8.3627-3632.1999.
Microbial populations, their distributions, and their aquatic environments were studied over a year (1997) at an acid mine drainage (AMD) site at Iron Mountain, Calif. Populations were quantified by fluorescence in situ hybridizations with group-specific probes. Probes were used for the domains Eucarya, Bacteria, and Archaea and the two species most widely studied and implicated for their role in AMD production, Thiobacillus ferrooxidans and Leptospirillum ferrooxidans. Results show that microbial populations, in relative proportions and absolute numbers, vary spatially and seasonally and correlate with geochemical and physical conditions (pH, temperature, conductivity, and rainfall). Bacterial populations were in the highest proportion (>95%) in January. Conversely, archaeal populations were in the highest proportion in July and September ( approximately 50%) and were virtually absent in the winter. Bacterial and archaeal populations correlated with conductivity and rainfall. High concentrations of dissolved solids, as reflected by high conductivity values (up to 125 mS/cm), occurred in the summer and correlated with high archaeal populations and proportionally lower bacterial populations. Eukaryotes were not detected in January, when total microbial cell numbers were lowest (<10(5) cells/ml), but eukaryotes increased at low-pH sites ( approximately 0.5) during the remainder of the year. This correlated with decreasing water temperatures (50 to 30 degrees C; January to November) and increasing numbers of prokaryotes (10(8) to 10(9) cells/ml). T. ferrooxidans was in highest abundance (>30%) at moderate pHs and temperatures ( approximately 2.5 and 20 degrees C) in sites that were peripheral to primary acid-generating sites and lowest (0 to 5%) at low-pH sites (pH approximately 0.5) that were in contact with the ore body. L. ferrooxidans was more widely distributed with respect to geochemical conditions (pH = 0 to 3; 20 to 50 degrees C) but was more abundant at higher temperatures and lower pHs ( approximately 40 degrees C; pH approximately 0.5) than T. ferrooxidans.
1997年,对加利福尼亚州铁山一处酸性矿山排水(AMD)场地的微生物种群、其分布及其水生环境进行了为期一年的研究。通过使用群体特异性探针进行荧光原位杂交来对种群进行定量。这些探针用于真核生物域、细菌域和古菌域,以及因在AMD产生中所起作用而研究最广泛且最受关注的两个物种,即氧化亚铁硫杆菌和嗜铁钩端螺旋菌。结果表明,微生物种群在相对比例和绝对数量上存在空间和季节性变化,并且与地球化学和物理条件(pH值、温度、电导率和降雨量)相关。1月份细菌种群比例最高(>95%)。相反,古菌种群在7月和9月比例最高(约50%),而在冬季几乎不存在。细菌和古菌种群与电导率和降雨量相关。高电导率值(高达125 mS/cm)反映出夏季溶解固体浓度较高,且与高古菌种群和相对较低的细菌种群比例相关。1月份未检测到真核生物,此时微生物细胞总数最低(<10⁵个细胞/毫升),但在一年中的其余时间里,低pH值(约0.5)的位点真核生物数量增加。这与水温下降(50至30摄氏度;1月至11月)以及原核生物数量增加(10⁸至10⁹个细胞/毫升)相关。氧化亚铁硫杆菌在中等pH值和温度(约2.5和20摄氏度)下,在主要产酸位点周边的位点丰度最高(>30%),而在与矿体接触的低pH值位点(pH约0.5)丰度最低(0至5%)。嗜铁钩端螺旋菌在地球化学条件(pH = 0至3;20至50摄氏度)下分布更广泛,但在较高温度和较低pH值(约40摄氏度;pH约0.5)下比氧化亚铁硫杆菌更为丰富。