Department of Biology, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, 87801, Socorro, New Mexico, USA.
Microb Ecol. 1993 Jul;26(1):59-78. doi: 10.1007/BF00166030.
Numbers and activities of microorganisms were measured in the vadose zones of three arid and semiarid areas of the western United States, and the influence of water availability was determined. These low-moisture environments have vadose zones that are commonly hundreds of meters thick. The specific sampling locations chosen were on or near U.S. Department of Energy facilities: the Nevada Test Site (NTS), the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL), and the Hanford Site (HS) in southcentral Washington State. Most of the sampling locations were uncontaminated, but geologically representative of nearby locations with storage and/or leakage of waste compounds in the vadose zone. Lithologies of samples included volcanic tuff, basalt, glaciofluvial and fluvial sediments, and paleosols (buried soils). Samples were collected aseptically, either by drilling bore-holes (INEL and HS), or by excavation within tunnels (NTS) and outcrop faces (paleosols near the HS). Total numbers of microorganisms were counted using direct microscopy, and numbers of culturable microorganisms were determined using plate-count methods. Desiccation-tolerant microorganisms were quantified by plate counts performed after 24 h desiccation of the samples. Mineralization of (14)C-labeled glucose and acetate was quantified in samples at their ambient moisture contents, in dried samples, and in moistened samples, to test the hypothesis that water limits microbial activities in vadose zones. Total numbers of microorganisms ranged from log 4.5 to 7.1 cells g(-1) dry wt. Culturable counts ranged from log <2 to 6.7 CFU g(-1) dry wt, with the highest densities occurring in paleosol (buried soil) samples. Culturable cells appeared to be desiccation-tolerant in nearly all samples that had detectable viable heterotrophs. Water limited mineralization in some, but not all samples, suggesting that an inorganic nutrient or other factor may limit microbial activities in some vadose zone environments.
在美国西部三个干旱和半干旱地区的包气带中测量了微生物的数量和活性,并确定了水分可利用性的影响。这些低湿度环境的包气带通常厚达数百米。选择的特定采样地点位于美国能源部设施附近或之上:内华达试验场(NTS)、爱达荷国家工程实验室(INEL)和华盛顿州中南部的汉福德现场(HS)。大多数采样地点没有受到污染,但在地质上代表了附近储存和/或在包气带中泄漏废物化合物的地点。样品的岩性包括火山凝灰岩、玄武岩、冰川河流和河流沉积物以及古土壤(埋藏土壤)。样品是无菌采集的,要么通过钻孔(INEL 和 HS),要么通过隧道内的挖掘(NTS)和露头面(HS 附近的古土壤)。使用直接显微镜计数微生物的总数,并使用平板计数法确定可培养微生物的数量。通过对样品进行 24 小时干燥后的平板计数来量化耐旱微生物的数量。在样品的环境湿度下、干燥样品中和加湿样品中,量化了(14)C 标记的葡萄糖和乙酸的矿化作用,以检验水分限制包气带中微生物活性的假设。微生物总数的范围从 log4.5 到 7.1 个细胞 g(-1)干重。可培养的计数范围从 log<2 到 6.7 CFU g(-1)干重,最高密度出现在古土壤(埋藏土壤)样品中。在几乎所有具有可检测存活异养生物的样品中,可培养细胞似乎都具有耐旱性。水分限制了一些但不是所有样品中的矿化作用,这表明在一些包气带环境中,无机养分或其他因素可能限制了微生物的活性。