Metal Mobilization by
Iron- and Sulfur-Oxidizing Bacteria
in a Multiple Extreme Mine Tailings in the Atacama Desert, Chile
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Abstract
The marine shore sulfidic mine tailings dump at the Chañaral
Bay in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile, is characterized by extreme
acidity, high salinity, and high heavy metals concentrations. Due
to pyrite oxidation, metals (especially copper) are mobilized under
acidic conditions and transported toward the tailings surface and
precipitate as secondary minerals (Dold, <i>Environ. Sci. Technol</i>. <b>2006</b>, <i>40</i>, 752–758.). Depth
profiles of total cell counts in this almost organic-carbon free multiple
extreme environment showed variable numbers with up to 10<sup>8</sup> cells g<sup>–1</sup> dry weight for 50 samples at four sites.
Real-time PCR quantification and bacterial 16S rRNA gene diversity
analysis via clone libraries revealed a dominance of <i>Bacteria</i> over <i>Archaea</i> and the frequent occurrence of the
acidophilic iron(II)- and sulfur-oxidizing and iron(III)-reducing
genera <i>Acidithiobacillus</i>, <i>Alicyclobacillus</i>, and <i>Sulfobacillus.</i> Acidophilic chemolithoautotrophic
iron(II)-oxidizing bacteria were also frequently found via most-probable-number
(MPN) cultivation. Halotolerant iron(II)-oxidizers in enrichment cultures
were active at NaCl concentrations up to 1 M. Maximal microcalorimetrically
determined pyrite oxidation rates coincided with maxima of the pyrite
content, total cell counts, and MPN of iron(II)-oxidizers. These findings
indicate that microbial pyrite oxidation and metal mobilization preferentially
occur in distinct tailings layers at high salinity. Microorganisms
for biomining with seawater salt concentrations obviously exist in
nature