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Attached and unattached bacterial communities in a 120-meter corehole in an acidic, crystalline rock aquifier

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Attached and unattached bacterial communities in a 120-meter corehole in an acidic, crystalline rock aquifier
Names Lehman, R. Michael (creator)
Roberto, Francisco F. (creator)
Early, Drummond (creator)
Bruhn, Debby F. (creator)
Brink, Susan E. (creator)
O'Connell, Sean P. (creator)
Delwiche, Mark. E (creator)
Colwell, Frederick (creator)
Date Issued 2001-05 (iso8601)
Abstract The bacteria colonizing geologic core sections (attached) were contrasted with those found suspended in the
groundwater (unattached) by examining the microbiology of 16 depth-paired core and groundwater samples
using a suite of culture-independent and culture-dependent analyses. One hundred twenty-two meters was
continuously cored from a buried chalcopyrite ore hosted in a biotite-quartz-monzonite porphyry at the
Mineral Park Mine near Kingman, Ariz. Every fourth 1.5-m core was acquired using microbiologically
defensible methods, and these core sections were aseptically processed for characterization of the attached
bacteria. Groundwater samples containing unattached bacteria were collected from the uncased corehole at
depth intervals corresponding to the individual cores using an inflatable straddle packer sampler. The
groundwater was acidic (pH 2.8 to 5.0), with low levels of dissolved oxygen and high concentrations of sulfate
and metals, including ferrous iron. Total numbers of attached cells were less than 10⁵ cells g of core material¯¹
while unattached cells numbered about 10⁵ cells ml of groundwater¯¹. Attached and unattached acidophilic
heterotrophs were observed throughout the depth profile. In contrast, acidophilic chemolithotrophs were not
found attached to the rock but were commonly observed in the groundwater. Attached communities were
composed of low numbers (<40 CFU g¯¹) of neutrophilic heterotrophs that exhibited a high degree of
morphologic diversity, while unattached communities contained higher numbers (ca. 10³ CFU ml¯¹) of
neutrophilic heterotrophs of limited diversity. Sulfate-reducing bacteria were restricted to the deepest samples
of both core and groundwater. 16S ribosomal DNA sequence analysis of attached, acidophilic isolates indicated
that organisms closely related to heterotrophic, acidophilic mesophiles such as Acidiphilium organovorum and,
surprisingly, to the moderately thermophilic Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius were present. The results indicate
that viable (but possibly inactive) microorganisms were present in the buried ore and that there was substantial
distinction in biomass and physiological capabilities between attached and unattached populations.
Genre Article
Identifier Brink, S. E., Bruhn, D. F., Colwell, F. S., Delwiche, D. F., Early, D., Lehman, R. M., O’Connell, S. P., and Roberto, F. F., (2001). Attached and unattached bacterial communities in a 120-meter corehole in an acidic, crystalline rock aquifer. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 67(5), 2095-2106.

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