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Wiley InterScience

FEMS Microbiology Ecology

FEMS Microbiology Ecology

Volume 60 Issue 2, Pages 220 - 228

Published Online: 11 Apr 2007

© 2009 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved



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In situ hydrogen consumption kinetics as an indicator of subsurface microbial activity
Steve H. Harris 1 , Richard L. Smith 2 & Joseph M. Suflita 1
  1 Department of Botany and Microbiology, Institute for Energy and the Environment, The University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA; and   2 US Geological Survey, Water Resources Discipline, Boulder, CO, USA
  Correspondence: Steve H. Harris,
US Geological Survey, Box 25046, MS 977, Denver Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225, USA. Tel.: +1 303 236 9367; fax: +1 303 236 3202; e-mail: shharris@usgs.gov

 Editor: Patricia Sobecky

Copyright © 2007 Federation of European Microbiological Societies
KEYWORDS
hydrogen consumption • in situ microbial activity • kinetics • TEAP • field measurement

ABSTRACT

There are few methods available for broadly assessing microbial community metabolism directly within a groundwater environment. In this study, hydrogen consumption rates were estimated from in situ injection/withdrawal tests conducted in two geochemically varying, contaminated aquifers as an approach towards developing such a method. The hydrogen consumption first-order rates varied from 0.002 nM h−1 for an uncontaminated, aerobic site to 2.5 nM h−1 for a contaminated site where sulfate reduction was a predominant process. The method could accommodate the over three orders of magnitude range in rates that existed between subsurface sites. In a denitrifying zone, the hydrogen consumption rate (0.02 nM h−1) was immediately abolished in the presence of air or an antibiotic mixture, suggesting that such measurements may also be sensitive to the effects of environmental perturbations on field microbial activities. Comparable laboratory determinations with sediment slurries exhibited hydrogen consumption kinetics that differed substantially from the field estimates. Because anaerobic degradation of organic matter relies on the rapid consumption of hydrogen and subsequent maintenance at low levels, such in situ measures of hydrogen turnover can serve as a key indicator of the functioning of microbial food webs and may be more reliable than laboratory determinations.


Received 27 July 2006; revised 2 October 2006; accepted 12 December 2006.
First published online April 2007.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1574-6941.2007.00286.x About DOI

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