Characterization of elemental release during microbe-basalt interactions
Abstract
This study used batch reactors to characterize the rates, mechanisms, and stoichiometry of elemental release during the interaction of Burkholderia fungorum, a common soil microbe, with Columbia River Flood Basalt at 28°C for 36 d. We especially focused on the release of Ca, Mg, P, Si, and Sr under a variety of biotic and abiotic conditions with the ultimate aim of evaluating how actively metabolizing bacteria might influence basalt weathering on the continents. Four days after inoculating P-limited reactors (those lacking P in the growth medium), pH decreased from ~7 to 4, and glucose was depleted. Theoretical calculations suggest that the lowered pH resulted from the release of organic acids and/or CO2. Purely abiotic control reactors as well as control reactors containing nonviable cells showed constant glucose concentrations and near-neutral pH. Over the entire 36 day period, the P-limited reactors yielded Ca, Mg, Si, and Sr release rates several times higher than those observed in the P-bearing biotic reactors and the abiotic controls. Release rates directly correlate with pH, indicating that proton-promoted dissolution was the dominant reaction mechanism. Ligand- promoted dissolution was probably less important because the P-limited and P-bearing reactors experienced nearly identical rates of microbial growth, but the P-bearing reactors displayed overall lower dissolution rates at near-neutral pH, where presumably, the effect of ligand-promoted dissolution would be most evident. Chemical analyses of bacteria collected at the end of the experiments, combined with mass-balances between the biological and fluid phases, demonstrate that the low P concentration in the biotic reactors was an artifact of P uptake during microbial growth. These findings suggest that when bacteria utilize basalt as a nutrient source, they can potentially elevate the rate of long-term atmospheric CO2 consumption by Ca-Mg silicate weathering by a factor of 5 over the corresponding inorganic rate.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2006
- Bibcode:
- 2006AGUFM.B11A1016W
- Keywords:
-
- 0412 Biogeochemical kinetics and reaction modeling (0414;
- 0793;
- 1615;
- 4805;
- 0414 Biogeochemical cycles;
- processes;
- and modeling (0412;
- 0793;
- 1615;
- 4805;
- 0448 Geomicrobiology;
- 0463 Microbe/mineral interactions;
- 0470 Nutrients and nutrient cycling (4845;
- 4850)