Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor LL57 2UW, United Kingdom
2. Mintek, Randburg 2125, South Africa
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Microorganisms were enumerated and isolated on selective solid media from a pilot-scale stirred-tank bioleaching operation in which a polymetallic sulfide concentrate was subjected to biologically accelerated oxidation at 45°C. Four distinct prokaryotes were isolated: three bacteria (an
Acidithiobacillus caldus
-like organism, a thermophilic
Leptospirillum
sp., and a
Sulfobacillus
sp.) and one archaeon (a
Ferroplasma
-like isolate). The relative numbers of these prokaryotes changed in the three reactors sampled, and the
Ferroplasma
isolate became increasingly dominant as mineral oxidation progressed, eventually accounting for >99% of plate isolates in the third of three in-line reactors. The identities of the isolates were confirmed by analyses of their 16S rRNA genes, and some key physiological traits (e.g., oxidation of iron and/or sulfur and autotrophy or heterotrophy) were examined. More detailed studies were carried out with the
Leptospirillum
and
Ferroplasma
isolates. The data presented here represent the first quantitative study of the microorganisms in a metal leaching situation and confirm that mixed cultures of iron- and sulfur-oxidizing prokaryotic acidophiles catalyze the accelerated dissolution of sulfidic minerals in industrial tank bioleaching operations. The results show that indigenous acidophilic microbial populations change as mineral dissolution becomes more extensive.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
281 articles.
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