Journal ArticleOpen Access
Microbial Mineral Weathering for Nutrient Acquisition Releases Arsenic
Author Affiliations
Barnard College, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Duquesne University, ...
Published InApplied and Environmental Microbiology
Year2009
Citations107
Abstract
Tens of millions of people in Southeast Asia drink groundwater contaminated with naturally occurring arsenic. How arsenic is released from the sediment into the water remains poorly understood. Here, we show in laboratory experiments that phosphate-limited cells of Burkholderia fungorum mobilize ancillary arsenic from apatite. We hypothesize that arsenic mobilization is a by-product of mineral weathering for nutrient acquisition. The released arsenic does not undergo a redox transformation but appears to be solubilized from the apatite mineral lattice during weathering. Analysis of apatite from the source area in the Himalayan basin indicates the presence of elevated levels of arsenic, with an average concentration of 210 mg/kg. The rate of arsenic release is independent of the initial dissolved arsenic concentration and…
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