Wa. Clarke et al., FERRIC HYDROXIDE AND FERRIC HYDROXYSULFATE PRECIPITATION BY BACTERIA IN AN ACID-MINE DRAINAGE LAGOON, FEMS microbiology reviews, 20(3-4), 1997, pp. 351-361
The spontaneous precipitation of amorphous iron hydroxide and ferric h
ydroxysulfate has generally been considered to be an inorganic process
involving the oxidation of ferrous iron with or without the presence
of sulfate. However, our study of bacterial communities growing in an
acid mine drainage lagoon sediment has confirmed that microorganisms w
ere also capable of facilitating this mineral precipitation. Transmiss
ion electron microscopy revealed that bacteria growing at the surface
had iron-rich capsules, along with detectable amounts of Zn, Ti, Mn an
d K incorporated into the mineralised matrix. In the subsurface, more
cells were associated with granular, fine-grained mineral precipitates
, composed almost exclusively of iron and sulfur. Pore water profiles
indicated that no discernible sulfate reduction had taken place, sugge
sting that these authigenic minerals were 'ferric hydroxysulfate', and
not iron sulfide. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy further indica
ted that the subsurface minerals had variable composition, with the Fe
:S ratio decreasing with depth from 3.5:1 at 15 cm to 1.9:1 at 30 cm.
This indicates the high reactivity of ferric hydroxide for dissolved s
ulfate. Because iron reduction was limited to sediment depths between
3-10 cm, it is conceivable that these minerals are not amenable to bac
terial reduction, and hence, the ability of bacteria to bind and form
such precipitates may provide a natural solution to cleansing acidifie
d waters with a high dissolved metal content.