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Relationships between microbial communities and environmental parameters at sites impacted by mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits,Prince William Sound,Alaska
Authors:AL Foster  L Munk  RA Koski  WC Shanks III  LL Stillings
Institution:1. US Geological Survey Mineral Resources Program, 345 Middlefield Rd., MS 901 Menlo Park, CA 94025, United States;2. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Alaska, 3211 Providence Drive, BMH 205B, Anchorage, AK 99508, United States;3. US Geological Survey, Federal Center MS, Denver, CO, United States;4. US Geological Survey, MS-176, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, United States
Abstract:The relations among geochemical parameters and sediment microbial communities were examined at three shoreline sites in the Prince William Sound, Alaska, which display varying degrees of impact by acid-rock drainage (ARD) associated with historic mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits. Microbial communities were examined using total fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs), a class of compounds derived from lipids produced by eukaryotes and prokaryotes (bacteria and Archaea); standard extraction techniques detect FAMEs from both living (viable) and dead (non-viable) biomass, but do not detect Archaeal FAMEs. Biomass and diversity (as estimated by FAMEs) varied strongly as a function of position in the tidal zone, not by study site; subtidal muds, Fe oxyhydroxide undergoing biogenic reductive dissolution, and peat-rich intertidal sediment had the highest values. These estimates were lowest in acid-generating, intertidal zone sediment; if valid, the estimates suggest that only one or two bacterial species predominate in these communities, and/or that Archeal species are important members of the microbial community in this sediment.
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