Affiliation:
1. Environmental Science Research Center, School of Public and Environmental Affairs
2. Department of Geological Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405-1405
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Although previous research has demonstrated that NO
3
−
inhibits microbial Fe(III) reduction in laboratory cultures and natural sediments, the mechanisms of this inhibition have not been fully studied in an environmentally relevant medium that utilizes solid-phase, iron oxide minerals as a Fe(III) source. To study the dynamics of Fe and NO
3
−
biogeochemistry when ferric (hydr)oxides are used as the Fe(III) source,
Shewanella putrefaciens
200 was incubated under anoxic conditions in a low-ionic-strength, artificial groundwater medium with various amounts of NO
3
−
and synthetic, high-surface-area goethite. Results showed that the presence of NO
3
−
inhibited microbial goethite reduction more severely than it inhibited microbial reduction of the aqueous or microcrystalline sources of Fe(III) used in other studies. More interestingly, the presence of goethite also resulted in a twofold decrease in the rate of NO
3
−
reduction, a 10-fold decrease in the rate of NO
2
−
reduction, and a 20-fold increase in the amounts of N
2
O produced. Nitrogen stable isotope experiments that utilized δ
15
N values of N
2
O to distinguish between chemical and biological reduction of NO
2
−
revealed that the N
2
O produced during NO
2
−
or NO
3
−
reduction in the presence of goethite was primarily of abiotic origin. These results indicate that concomitant microbial Fe(III) and NO
3
−
reduction produces NO
2
−
and Fe(II), which then abiotically react to reduce NO
2
−
to N
2
O with the subsequent oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III).
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
96 articles.
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