Williamson Research Centre, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, United Kingdom.
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queens Road, Bristol BS8 1RJ, United Kingdom.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Feb 1;754:142312. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142312. Epub 2020 Sep 21.
Lead is a toxic environmental contaminant associated with current and historic mine sites. Here we studied the natural attenuation of Pb in a limestone cave system that receives drainage from the ancient Priddy Mineries, UK. Extensive deposits of manganese oxides were observed to be forming on the cave walls and as coatings in the stream beds. Analysis of these deposits identified them as birnessite (δ-MnO), with some extremely high concentrations of sorbed Pb (up to 56 wt%) also present. We hypothesised that these cave crusts were actively being formed by microbial Mn(II)-oxidation, and to investigate this the microbial communities were characterised by DNA sequencing, enrichment and isolation experiments. The birnessite deposits contained abundant and diverse prokaryotes and fungi, with ~5% of prokaryotes and ~ 10% of fungi closely related to known heterotrophic Mn(II)-oxidisers. A substantial proportion (up to 17%) of prokaryote sequences were assigned to groups known as autotrophic ammonia and nitrite oxidisers, suggesting that nitrogen cycling may play an important role in contributing energy and carbon to the cave crust microbial communities and consequently the formation of Mn(IV) oxides and Pb attenuation. Enrichment and isolation experiments showed that the birnessite deposits contained Mn(II)-oxidising microorganisms, and two isolates (Streptomyces sp. and Phyllobacterium sp.) could oxidise Mn(II) in the presence of 0.1 mM Pb. Supplying the enrichment cultures with acetate as a source of energy and carbon stimulated Mn(II)-oxidation, but excess organics in the form of glucose generated aqueous Mn(II), likely via microbial Mn(IV)-reduction. In this karst cave, microbial Mn(II)-oxidation contributes to the active sequestration and natural attenuation of Pb from contaminated waters, and therefore may be considered a natural analogue for the design of wastewater remediation systems and for understanding the geochemical controls on karst groundwater quality, a resource relied upon by billions of people across the globe.
铅是一种与当前和历史矿山有关的有毒环境污染物。在这里,我们研究了从英国古老的 Priddy 矿接收排水的石灰岩洞穴系统中 Pb 的自然衰减。观察到大量的锰氧化物沉积物在洞穴墙壁上形成,并在溪流床中形成涂层。对这些沉积物的分析表明它们是水钠锰矿(δ-MnO),其中一些吸附的 Pb 浓度极高(高达 56wt%)。我们假设这些洞穴外壳是由微生物 Mn(II)氧化作用积极形成的,为了研究这一点,我们通过 DNA 测序、富集和分离实验来描述微生物群落的特征。水钠锰矿沉积物中含有丰富多样的原核生物和真菌,其中约 5%的原核生物和~10%的真菌与已知的异养 Mn(II)氧化菌密切相关。相当一部分(高达 17%)的原核生物序列被分配到被称为自养氨和亚硝酸盐氧化菌的群体中,这表明氮循环可能在为洞穴外壳微生物群落提供能量和碳方面发挥重要作用,从而形成 Mn(IV)氧化物和 Pb 衰减。富集和分离实验表明,水钠锰矿沉积物中含有 Mn(II)氧化微生物,两种分离株(链霉菌属和 Phyllobacterium sp.)可以在 0.1mM Pb 存在的情况下氧化 Mn(II)。向富集培养物提供乙酸作为能源和碳源可刺激 Mn(II)氧化,但以葡萄糖形式存在的过量有机物可能通过微生物 Mn(IV)还原生成水溶 Mn(II)。在这个喀斯特洞穴中,微生物 Mn(II)氧化作用有助于从受污染的水中主动固定和自然衰减 Pb,因此可以被认为是废水修复系统设计和理解岩溶地下水质量地球化学控制的天然类比,而岩溶地下水是全球数十亿人所依赖的资源。