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1.
Chemosphere ; 359: 142292, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38729442

RESUMEN

The interconnection between biotic and abiotic pathways involving the nitrogen and iron biogeochemical cycles has recently gained interest. While lacustrine ecosystems are considered prone to the biotic nitrate reduction (denitrification), their potential for promoting the abiotic nitrite reduction (chemodenitrification) remains unclear. In the present study, batch incubations were performed to assess the potential for chemodenitrification and denitrification in the saline inland lake Gallocanta. Sulfidic conditions are found in top sediments of the system while below (5-9 cm), it presents low organic carbon and high sulfate and ferrous iron availability. Anoxic incubations of sediment (5-9 cm) and water from the lake with nitrite revealed potential for chemodenitrification, especially when external ferrous iron was added. The obtained isotopic fractionation values for nitrite (ɛ15NNO2) were -6.8 and -12.3 ‰ and therefore, fell in the range of those previously reported for the nitrite reduction. The more pronounced ɛ15NNO2 (-12.3 ‰) measured in the experiment containing additional ferrous iron was attributed to a higher contribution of the chemodenitrification over biotic denitrification. Incubations containing nitrate also confirmed the potential for denitrification under autotrophic conditions (low organic carbon, high ferrous iron). Higher reaction rate constants were found in the experiment containing 100 µM compared to 400 µM nitrate. The obtained ɛ15NNO3 values (-8.5 and -15.1 ‰) during nitrate consumption fell in the range of those expected for the denitrification. A more pronounced ɛ15NNO3 (-15.1 ‰) was determined in the experiment presenting a lower reaction rate constant (400 µM nitrate). Therefore, in Gallocanta lake, nitrite generated during nitrate reduction can be further reduced by both the abiotic and biotic pathways. These findings establish the significance of chemodenitrification in lacustrine systems and support further exploration in aquatic environments with different levels of C, N, S, and Fe. This might be especially useful in predicting nitrous oxide emissions in natural ecosystems.


Asunto(s)
Desnitrificación , Sedimentos Geológicos , Lagos , Nitratos , Nitritos , Lagos/química , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Nitratos/análisis , Nitritos/química , Nitritos/análisis , Hierro/química , Oxidación-Reducción , Nitrógeno/análisis , Ecosistema , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/metabolismo
2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 3032, 2023 Feb 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36810292

RESUMEN

The sulphur cycle has a key role on the fate of nutrients through its several interconnected reactions. Although sulphur cycling in aquatic ecosystems has been thoroughly studied since the early 70's, its characterisation in saline endorheic lakes still deserves further exploration. Gallocanta Lake (NE Spain) is an ephemeral saline inland lake whose main sulphate source is found on the lake bed minerals and leads to dissolved sulphate concentrations higher than those of seawater. An integrative study including geochemical and isotopic characterization of surface water, porewater and sediment has been performed to address how sulphur cycling is constrained by the geological background. In freshwater and marine environments, sulphate concentration decreases with depth are commonly associated with bacterial sulphate reduction (BSR). However, in Gallocanta Lake sulphate concentrations in porewater increase from 60 mM at the water-sediment interface to 230 mM at 25 cm depth. This extreme increase could be caused by dissolution of the sulphate rich mineral epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O). Sulphur isotopic data was used to validate this hypothesis and demonstrate the occurrence of BSR near the water-sediment interface. This dynamic prevents methane production and release from the anoxic sediment, which is advantageous in the current context of global warming. These results underline that geological context should be considered in future biogeochemical studies of inland lakes with higher potential availability of electron acceptors in the lake bed compared to the water column.

3.
Chemosphere ; 316: 137802, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36640969

RESUMEN

Iron is geologically important and biochemically crucial for all microorganisms, plants and animals due to its redox exchange, the involvement in electron transport and metabolic processes. Despite the abundance of iron in the earth crust, its bioavailability is very limited in nature due to its occurrence as ferrihydrite, goethite, and hematite where they are thermodynamically stable with low dissolution kinetics in neutral or alkaline environments. Organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and plants have evolved iron acquisition mechanisms to increase its bioavailability in such environments, thereby, contributing largely to the iron cycle in the environment. Biogeochemical cycling of metals including Fe in natural systems usually results in stable isotope fractionation; the extent of fractionation depends on processes involved. Our review suggests that significant fractionation of iron isotopes occurs in low-temperature environments, where the extent of fractionation is greatly governed by several biogeochemical processes such as redox reaction, alteration, complexation, adsorption, oxidation and reduction, with or without the influence of microorganisms. This paper includes relevant data sets on the theoretical calculations, experimental prediction, as well as laboratory studies on stable iron isotopes fractionation induced by different biogeochemical processes.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos Férricos , Hierro , Temperatura , Isótopos de Hierro/análisis , Isótopos de Hierro/metabolismo , Hierro/química , Compuestos Férricos/química , Isótopos , Bacterias/metabolismo , Oxidación-Reducción , Fraccionamiento Químico
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(40)2021 10 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34593633

RESUMEN

Historically, the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the ocean has been attributed to photochemical and biochemical reactions. However, hydrothermal vents emit globally significant inventories of reduced Fe and S species that should react rapidly with oxygen in bottom water and serve as a heretofore unmeasured source of ROS. Here, we show that the Fe-catalyzed oxidation of reduced sulfur species in hydrothermal vent plumes in the deep oceans supported the abiotic formation of ROS at concentrations 20 to 100 times higher than the average for photoproduced ROS in surface waters. ROS (measured as hydrogen peroxide) were determined in hydrothermal plumes and seeps during a series of Alvin dives at the North East Pacific Rise. Hydrogen peroxide inventories in emerging plumes were maintained at levels proportional to the oxygen introduced by mixing with bottom water. Fenton chemistry predicts the production of hydroxyl radical under plume conditions through the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with the abundant reduced Fe in hydrothermal plumes. A model of the hydroxyl radical fate under plume conditions supports the role of plume ROS in the alteration of refractory organic molecules in seawater. The ocean's volume circulates through hydrothermal plumes on timescales similar to the age of refractory dissolved organic carbon. Thus, plume-generated ROS can initiate reactions that may affect global ocean carbon inventories.

5.
Water Res X ; 2: 100023, 2019 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31194011

RESUMEN

This study presents a new gel based technique to describe the pore water ammonium distribution through the sediment-water interface in two dimensions at a millimeter scale. The technique is an adaptation of the classical colorimetric method based on the Berthelot's reaction. After the thin film of the gel probe was equilibrated by diffusion either in standard solutions or in pore waters, a colorimetric reagent gel was set on the gel probe, allowing development of the characteristic green color. A flatbed scanner and subsequent densitometry image analysis allowed to determine the concentration distribution of ammonium. The gel probe was tested in the laboratory for two media, deionized water and seawater, within the range 0-3000 µM in NH4 +. Detection limit is about 20 µM and accuracy about ±25 µM. The field validation was realized in a tidal mudflat of the French Atlantic coast by comparison with conventional pore water extraction and colorimetric analysis. The large range of concentrations and its applicability in continental and marine sediments suggest a wide range of applications of the technique for a reasonable cost.

6.
Talanta ; 200: 15-21, 2019 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31036167

RESUMEN

We describe the modification of the porphyrin method for low-level determination of the speciation of dissolved Mn in seawater. First, an investigation of sensitivity of the method versus the salinity, the reagent composition and the type of ligands present is described for a few micromolar of dissolved Mn. Then, using certified seawater reference standards, we demonstrate the accuracy of the method for total concentrations of manganese between 1 and 10 nM. To this aim, we report the reactivity of solutions made of Mn(II) and Mn(III) bound to Tiron and DFOB with our optimized porphyrin reagent which includes adding excess Cd2+, and compare these results with data from representative natural seawater samples. This work describes an improved method that gives the opportunity for future work to investigate Mn speciation at nanomolar concentration in the open ocean.

7.
Anal Chem ; 91(2): 1399-1407, 2019 01 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30547582

RESUMEN

Siderophores are natural metal chelating agents that strongly control the biogeochemical metal cycles such as Fe in the environment. This article describes a new methodology to detect and quantify at the micromolar concentration the spatial distribution at millimeter scale of siderophores within the root's system. The "universal" CAS assay originally designed for bacterial siderophores detection and later designed for fungus was adapted here for diffusive equilibrium in thin film gel techniques (DET). The method was calibrated against the marketed desferrioxamine mesylate (DFOM) siderophore and applied with experiments performed with sunflower ( Helianthus annuus) and wheat ( Triticum aestivum) cultivated on free iron agar medium plates. We present here the first results with 2D images of the siderophores distribution in the vicinity of the root system of plants. With this technique we detected (i) the production of siderophores on bacteria inoculated ( Pseudomonas fluorescens) environments and (ii) hotspots of natural iron binding ligands production up to 50 µM in the wheat rhizosphere. The lower detection limit in our experiment was 2.5 µmol/L. This new technique offers a unique opportunity to investigate the siderophore production in two dimensions in a wide range of applications from laboratory experiments to natural systems very likely using an in situ and nondestructive tool.


Asunto(s)
Pseudomonas fluorescens/metabolismo , Sideróforos/metabolismo , Calibración , Difusión , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Cinética , Concentración Osmolar , Triticum/microbiología
8.
Environ Sci Technol ; 48(5): 2816-26, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24502458

RESUMEN

This study presents a new approach combining diffusive equilibrium in thin-film (DET) and spectrophotometric methods to determine the spatial variability of dissolved iron and dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) with a single gel probe. Its originality is (1) to postpone up to three months the colorimetric reaction of DET by freezing and (2) to measure simultaneously dissolved iron and DRP by hyperspectral imaging at a submillimeter resolution. After a few minutes at room temperature, the thawed gel is sandwiched between two monospecific reagent DET gels, leading to magenta and blue coloration for iron and phosphate, respectively. Spatial distribution of the resulting colors is obtained using a hyperspectral camera. Reflectance spectra analysis enables deconvolution of specific colorations by the unmixing method applied to the logarithmic reflectance, leading to an accurate quantification of iron and DRP. This method was applied in the Arcachon lagoon (France) on muddy sediments colonized by eelgrass (Zostera noltei) meadows. The 2D gel probes highlighted microstructures in the spatial distribution of dissolved iron and phosphorus, which are most likely associated with the occurrence of benthic fauna burrows and seagrass roots.


Asunto(s)
Sedimentos Geológicos/análisis , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Hierro/análisis , Fósforo/análisis , Espectrofotometría/métodos , Resinas Acrílicas/química , Color , Colorimetría/métodos , Francia , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Hierro/química , Fosfatos/análisis , Análisis Espacial , Zosteraceae/fisiología
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