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  4. An experimental model approach of biologically-assisted silicate dissolution with olivine and Escherichia coli - Impact on chemical weathering of mafic rocks and atmospheric CO2 drawdown
 
research article

An experimental model approach of biologically-assisted silicate dissolution with olivine and Escherichia coli - Impact on chemical weathering of mafic rocks and atmospheric CO2 drawdown

Garcia, Bruno
•
Lemelle, Laurence
•
Rose-Koga, Estelle
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2013
Applied Geochemistry

Chemical weathering of Mg, Ca-silicates and alumino-silicates contributes significantly to the drawdown of atmospheric CO2 over long time scales. The present work focuses on how this mode of weathering may change in the presence of free-living bacteria in oligotrophic waters, which compose most of the surface freshwaters of the Earth. Forsterite (Fo90) was reacted for 1 week with a stable Escherichia coli population in water maintained at 37 degrees C and neutral pH in a batch reactor. Control samples with suspensions of pure olivine powders and E. coli cells in pure water were also used for reference. Olivine controls reproduce the Mg, Si and Fe release in solutions predicted from rates published in the literature with pH shifts of less than 0.5 unit. After 1 week, under abiotic conditions, weathered surfaces are enriched in Fe and Fe3+ relative to the initial composition of the mineral. Bacterial controls (without minerals) show decreasing Eh with increasing cell concentrations (-50 mV with 7 x 10(7) cells/mL and -160 mV with 8 x 10(8) cells/mL). Magnesium concentrations in bacterial control solutions are in the mu g/L range and can be accounted for by the release of Mg from dead cells. More than 80% of the cells were still alive after 1 week. The solutions obtained in the experiments in which olivine reacts in the presence of cells show Mg and Si concentrations a few tens of percent lower than in the mineral control samples, with a prominent depletion of Fe(III) content of the mineral surfaces. Magnesium mass balance discounts both significant bacterial uptake and inhibition of the Mg dissolution rates as a consequence of changing pH and Eh. Coating by bacterial cell layers is also negligible. E. coli reduces the chemical weathering of olivine. This study infers that the presence of free-living Proteobacteria, a prevalent group of subsurface bacteria, should decrease the amount of riverine Mg released by chemical weathering of mafic rocks. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.apgeochem.2013.01.007
Web of Science ID

WOS:000316659500019

Author(s)
Garcia, Bruno
Lemelle, Laurence
Rose-Koga, Estelle
Perriat, Pascal
Basset, Romain
Gillet, Philippe  
Albarede, Francis
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd

Published in
Applied Geochemistry
Volume

31

Start page

216

End page

227

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
EPSL  
Available on Infoscience
May 13, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/92153
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