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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2006, p. 2022-2030, Vol. 72, No. 3
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.3.2022-2030.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Macroscopic Streamer Growths in Acidic, Metal-Rich Mine Waters in North Wales Consist of Novel and Remarkably Simple Bacterial Communities
Kevin B. Hallberg,
Kris Coupland,
Sakurako Kimura, and
D. Barrie Johnson*
School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor LL57 2UW, United Kingdom
Received 7 October 2005/
Accepted 1 December 2005
The microbial composition of acid streamers (macroscopic biofilms) in acidic, metal-rich waters in two locations (an abandoned copper mine and a chalybeate spa) in north Wales was studied using cultivation-based and biomolecular techniques. Known chemolithotrophic and heterotrophic acidophiles were readily isolated from disrupted streamers, but they accounted for only <1 to 7% of the total microorganisms present. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) revealed that 80 to 90% of the microbes in both types of streamers were ß-Proteobacteria. Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of the streamers suggested that a single bacterial species was dominant in the copper mine streamers, while two distinct bacteria (one of which was identical to the bacterium found in the copper mine streamers) accounted for about 90% of the streamers in the spa water. 16S rRNA gene clone libraries showed that the ß-proteobacterium found in both locations was closely related to a clone detected previously in acid mine drainage in California and that its closest characterized relatives were neutrophilic ammonium oxidizers. Using a modified isolation technique, this bacterium was isolated from the copper mine streamers and shown to be a novel acidophilic autotrophic iron oxidizer. The ß-proteobacterium found only in the spa streamers was closely related to the neutrophilic iron oxidizer Gallionella ferruginea. FISH analysis using oligonucleotide probes that targeted the two ß-proteobacteria confirmed that the biodiversity of the streamers in both locations was very limited. The microbial compositions of the acid streamers found at the two north Wales sites are very different from the microbial compositions of the previously described acid streamers found at Iron Mountain, California, and the Rio Tinto, Spain.
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor LL57 2UW, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 1248 382 358. Fax: 44 1248 370 731. E-mail:
d.b.johnson{at}bangor.ac.uk.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2006, p. 2022-2030, Vol. 72, No. 3
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.72.3.2022-2030.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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