MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN DEEP CANADIAN SHIELD GROUNDWATERS - AN IN-SITU BIOFILM EXPERIMENT

Citation
F. Doig et al., MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES IN DEEP CANADIAN SHIELD GROUNDWATERS - AN IN-SITU BIOFILM EXPERIMENT, Geomicrobiology journal, 13(2), 1995, pp. 91-102
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
Journal title
ISSN journal
01490451
Volume
13
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
91 - 102
Database
ISI
SICI code
0149-0451(1995)13:2<91:MCIDCS>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Microbial biofilm communities were cultivated on stainless steel and p olypropylene surfaces within brine-filled exploration boreholes in cry stalline rocks of the Canadian Shield at Kidd Creek Mine (Timmins, Ont ario) and Copper Cliff South Mine (Sudbury, Ontario) at depths of 1402 m and 1219 m, respectively. The calcium-sodium-chloride brines were a cidic (pH 3.5-4.8) and had temperatures of 23.4 degrees C to 18.6 degr ees C. Direct microscopic counts using DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylin dole) epifluorescent staining revealed coccoid-shaped, vibroid, rod-sh aped, and filamentous bacteria in Copper Cliff South biofilms. The sam e morphological types were observed at Kidd Creek with the addition of a group of large (2-3 mu m in length) vibroid to rad-shaped bacteria. Average total counts were 9 +/- 7 x 10(6) bacteria/cm(2) for Copper C liff South biofilms and 5 +/- 1 x 10(6) bacteria/cm(2) for Kidd Creek biofilms with a mean biomass value of 131 +/- 35 mu g carbohydrate/cm( 2). Transmission electron microscopy revealed slightly vibroid, rod-sh aped, gram-negative cells (up to 2.3 mu m in length) at Kidd Creek Min e. At Copper Cliff South Mine, small gram-negative coccoid-shaped bact eria were observed (< 0.5 mu m in diameter). Many of the bacteria cont ained large polyhydroxybutyrate) rate storage inclusions and were comm only mineralized by amorphous precipitates exhibiting a typical iron o xide morphology. The accumulation of these iron oxide precipitates in the biofilms suggests that Fe2+-oxidizing bacteria are present Copper Cliff South ground-waters contained sufficient concentrations of sulfa te and nitrate to support sulfate-reducing and denitrifying bacteria, whereas Kidd Creek groundwaters did not. These results show that diver se populations of biofilm-forming bacteria exist in deep groundwaters at Copper Cliff South and Kidd Creek Mines.