Biological Controls on Water Chemistry - November 21, 2012

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Biological controls on water chemistry or how microbes may one day control the earth Richard Behr, Certified Maine Geologist November 20, 2012

Transcript of Biological Controls on Water Chemistry - November 21, 2012

Page 1: Biological Controls on Water Chemistry - November 21, 2012

Biological controls on water chemistry

or

how microbes may one day control the earth

Richard Behr, Certified Maine Geologist

November 20, 2012

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The “Take away”

• Chemical composition of ground water often results from microbial activity

• Human activities often enhance the microbial community’s influence

• Today’s examples are but a few that illustrate the human component

• Microbial activity often inferred from water quality data

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Two great references

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Microbes are the catalysts • Microbial mediated redox processes control solubility,

speciation, mobility, toxicity, bioavailability of many elements: – Fe, Mn, C, P, N, S, Cr, Cu, Co, As, Sb, Se, Hg …..

• Things were different in the 1960s and 70s….

• Microbial degradation of organic carbon is often the driving force • Organic carbon is both an energy and carbon source

• One microbe’s waste is another’s resource

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Let’s begin with the basic

requirements for microbes

• Where do they obtain energy for cell growth and

reproduction?

• Source of carbon?

• What can they breath?

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Terminology/Classification

• Metabolism, “denotes the complex series of energy-utilizing chemical reactions carried out by the cell” - Two general types….

• Catabolism – extracting energy from organic compounds by breaking

them down into component parts…thereby releasing energy

• Anabolism – using energy to build organic compounds by fitting the parts together.

To obtain energy from a substrate, the microbes remove electrons and transfer them to other chemicals (so-called terminal electron acceptors)

• Respiration - the use of inorganic chemicals as terminal electron acceptors (e.g., oxygen, iron, manganese or sulfate)

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Terminology/Classification (cont.)

• Nutrition –

• Heterotrophs – organisms that use organic carbon as

energy and carbon source – humans too

• Lithotrophs – use inorganic carbon, such as CO2 or

HCO3- as carbon source and an external source of

energy

• Chemolithotrophs – energy from oxidizing reduced inorganic

chemicals…such as iron

• Photolithotrophs – obtain energy from light

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Terminology/Classification (cont.)

• Aerobes – use oxygen as electron acceptor • Obligate aerobe – can only use oxygen

…. That’s what we are doing

• Anaerobes – respire using something other than oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor

• Obligate anaerobes – grow only in the absence of oxygen

• Falcultative anaerobes – use oxygen when available but may use other alternate electron acceptors or fermentation in absence of oxygen

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Microbes alter geochemistry largely through oxidation (degradation) of organic carbon

• It’s really all about producing energy

• transferring electrons from a reduced species, often an organic carbon molecule, to an oxidized substrate, an electron acceptor (e.g., oxygen)

• Energy released depends on the electron acceptor

• It begins with aerobic respiration

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Aerobic respiration or where it all begins

• Many microbes respire (or breathe) using oxygen in

ground water

• Under natural conditions the mass of organic carbon often does not exhaust the dissolved oxygen – Organic mass and flow paths

• But lots of human activities are capable of

overwhelming the natural system

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Lots of human activities can overwhelm the natural system

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Unlined Municipal Landfills – the old days

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Closed Unlined Municipal Landfills

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Septage spreading

Biosolids (waste water treatment sludge) for crop production

Gravel pit reclamation with manufactured topsoil

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Petroleum releases

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Unlined Construction and Demolition Debris Landfills

More sources of organic carbon

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Dense residential development without public sewer

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Some background

• Monitoring wells installed to provide a means to sample groundwater

• Groundwater sampling methods

• Characterize groundwater quality

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Bedrock Bedrock

Glacial outwash sand

Marine clay Marine clay

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Monitoring Well Detail

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Bedrock core samples

Sediment samples Drilling underway

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Monitoring well construction

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Sample collection

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Sometimes it’s obvious the water is contaminated

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Field Parameters: Temperature Specific conductance pH Dissolved oxygen Turbidity

Laboratory Parameters: Metals (e.g., iron, manganese) Salts (e.g., chloride, sulfate) Volatile organic compounds

(e.g., diethyl ether, benzene, TCE)

Indicators (e.g., ammonia, nitrate, alkalinity)

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Laboratory data is uploaded to a database for general use

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Unlined Construction and Demolition Debris Landfills

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January-93

October-95

July-98

April-01

January-04

October-06

TO

C (m

g/L

) Total Organic Carbon

Time Series Graph Unlined Construction and Demolition Debris Landfill

Groundwater Quality at MW-2

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Unlined Construction and Demolition Debris Landfill

Groundwater Quality at MW-2

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Total Organic Carbon

Dissolved Oxygen

So, what happens after the oxygen disappears?

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Transition from Aerobic to Anaerobic respiration

• After oxygen disappears, degradation continues…. – lots of microbes continue to degrade the organic carbon

• Microbes use a series of so-called alternate terminal electron acceptors – There is an order to their use

• The order dictated by energy released (and/or thermodynamics and kinetics)

• Energy released/available depends on the electron acceptor

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Nitrate reduction - NO3- ⇄ N2 or NO2

Manganese reduction - MnO2 ⇄ Mn2+

(insoluble species ⇄ soluble species)

Iron reduction - Fe2O3 ⇄ Fe2+

(insoluble species ⇄ soluble and insoluble species)

Sulfate reduction - SO42- ⇄ H2S

Carbon dioxide reduction - CO2 or CH2O ⇄ CH4

(Methanogenesis)

Alternate terminal electron acceptors The order after oxygen is depleted

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Oxidation is coupled with reduction

C6H6 (Benzene)

CO2

(Mn4+)

(Mn2+)

O2

H2O

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Gravel pit reclamation project in Sangerville, Maine

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GRAVEL PIT RECLAMATION

• Affected land must be restored: Establish

a vegetative layer to reduce erosion

• 3 Acre portion of a working gravel pit

• Reclaimed with a manufactured topsoil

rather than natural topsoil

• Monitor groundwater • Evaluate groundwater impacts

• Establish acceptable level and duration of impact,

if any

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MANUFACTURED TOPSOIL

WHAT IS IT? Yds/Acre Lb Nitrogen/Yd

• Short Paper Fiber 1200 2.2

• Municipal WW Sludge 120 56

• Sand 1200 0

• Nitrogen primarily organic

• Metals, organic carbon and other nutrients

• Final thickness: 12 - 15 inches

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Portion of the gravel pit reclaimed with a manufactured topsoil

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MW-104

Gravel pit reclamation with biosolids - 3 Acres of open pit

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Gravel Pit Reclamation Project – Barrett Pit MW-104

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Initially we anticipated the generation of a nitrate plume …but

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Take home – In addition to producing an iron and manganese plume, we produced an arsenic plume without adding arsenic

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Full Circle

• The reduced iron and manganese represents an energy source, if conditions are right

– In the presence of oxygen, some microbes obtain energy from the oxidation of iron and manganese

Fe 2+ (aq) Fe3+ (s) + e-

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Contaminated groundwater discharge

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Mn and Fe oxidation

The oxidation often occurs in groundwater

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Visual evidence of the oxidation of reduced iron

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Petroleum spills & leaks contaminate groundwater

But microbes limit the size of the contaminant plume

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Petroleum UST And it’s leaking

Without attenuation (e.g., biodegradation) the plume would reach the stream

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Groundwater Flow Direction

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Components of Gasoline B – Benzene T – Toluene

E – Ethyl Benzene X - Xylene

Approximate Plume Boundary

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Distance from Source (feet)

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EX

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g/L

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BTEX

Pete’s Garage – North Fryeburg

The microbes are responsible for the natural attenuation of the petroleum components…..otherwise the plume would be significantly larger

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Pete’s Garage – North Fryeburg

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Zone of Mn & Fe Reduction

Zone of Mn & Fe Oxidation

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Just one last example of microbes in action

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Experimental Acidification of Lake 223

• Experimental Lakes Area

Research station in

northwestern Ontario

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Experimental lake acidification

Nitric (HNO3) and Sulfuric (H2SO4) acids added to reduce pH

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• Typical lake cross-section after stratification

• Experimental acidification is nothing more than a large titration

• If one estimates volume of lake, pH and alkalinity

• Should be able to estimate the amount of acid needed to reduce pH

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Lake 223 – 1976 to 1978 • pH progressively lowered during 3 year period

– pH in 1976 reduced to 7.0

pH in 1977 reduced to 6.2

pH in 1978 reduced to 5.9

• But there was a big surprise…. – Original experimental design expected to focus on

biological changes (e.g., fish, algae and macro-invertebrates)

– Majority of buffering capacity from watershed?

• Added more acid than calculated to reduce pH

• Why?

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Microbial activity increased

• The lake sediments were already home to lots of microbes, including… anaerobic bacteria capable of reducing the added sulfate and nitrate

• Sulfate and nitrate “fueled” an unexpected increase in sulfate and nitrate reduction

• Reduced the effectiveness of acidification by more than 60%

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Micro-organisms provide internal lake buffering system

• Sulfate reduction

– CH2O + H2SO4 2- H2S + HCO3 -

– Sulfate reduction consumes hydrogen ions and produces alkalinity

• Nitrate reduction (aka denitrification)

Also produces alkalinity and consumes hydrogen ions

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You made it…. Thanks very much