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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
October
Munching microbes could cleanse
arsenic-contaminated groundwater
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
10/26/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
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Photo by Kwame Ross |
| Senior
research scientist Robert Sanford, left, and professor
Craig Bethke, both in geology, have discovered "important
links between the amount of organic material dissolved
in the groundwater and the concentrations of sulfate
and arsenic." |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. —Microbial
processes ultimately determine whether arsenic builds to dangerous levels
in groundwater, say researchers at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. Remediation may be as simple as stimulating certain
microbes to grow.
Arsenic contamination is a serious threat to human health. In the Ganges
Delta of Bangladesh, for example, chronic exposure to arsenic has been
linked to serious medical conditions, including hypertension, cardiovascular
disease and a variety of cancers.
“The threat extends to Central Illinois, where there are very
high levels of arsenic contamination in a number of wells,” said
Craig Bethke, a professor of geology
at Illinois and corresponding author of a paper to appear in the November
issue of the journal Geology. “We also discovered important links
between the amount of organic material dissolved in the groundwater
and the concentrations of sulfate and arsenic.”
The researchers analyzed water from 21 wells at various depths in the
Mahomet aquifer, a regional water supply for Central Illinois. “The
Mahomet aquifer was produced by a glacier, which pulverized and homogenized
the sediments,” Bethke said. “As a result, arsenic sources
that leach into the groundwater are pretty uniformly distributed.”
Surprisingly, however, arsenic concentration varied strongly from well
to well, Bethke said. “Concentrations may reach hundreds of micrograms
per liter in one well – which is enough to make people very sick
– but fall below detection limits in a nearby well.”
The concentration of arsenic varied inversely with the concentration
of sulfate, the researchers found. Methane concentration also varied
with the sulfate content. “We believe this reflects the distribution
of microbial populations in the aquifer system,” said graduate
student Matthew Kirk. “Our analyses suggest the aquifer is divided
into zones of mixed microbial activity, some dominated by sulfate-reducing
bacteria, others by methanogens.”
Sulfate-reducing bacteria will consume sulfate and reduce it into sulfide.
The sulfide then reacts to precipitate arsenic, leaving little in solution.
If the sulfate-reducing bacteria run out of sulfate, methanogenic bacteria
take over as the dominant metabolic force, Kirk said. Because methanogenic
bacteria don’t produce sulfide, there is no precipitation pathway
for the arsenic, which then accumulates to high levels in the groundwater.
“In the Mahomet aquifer, the balance between the amount of organic
material and the amount of sulfate that leaches into the groundwater
appears to control whether the water becomes contaminated,” Kirk
said. “Where the supply of sulfate is high relative to organic
matter, sulfate remains available and sulfate-reducing bacteria keep
arsenic levels low. But, where the supply of organic matter is high
relative to sulfate, the sulfate has been depleted, and arsenic may
accumulate.”
What does this mean to people living in Illinois?
“The majority of wells in Central Illinois belong to individual
homes and farms,” Bethke said. “Lacking effective water
treatment and testing, private wells are more at risk of arsenic poisoning.”
There is good news, however. The researchers’ findings suggest
that groundwater contaminated with arsenic might be easily identified
and remediated.
“Unlike detecting the presence of arsenic – which generally
requires a sensitive laboratory analysis – testing for sulfate
is simple and straightforward,” Bethke said. “If all waters
containing sulfate are safe, as in our dataset, then measuring sulfate
level would be an easy but reliable field test to identify safe drinking
water from unsafe.”
Adding sulfate to naturally contaminated groundwater might be a simple
but effective method to sequester the arsenic, Kirk said. “The
bacteria are already present, so all you have to do is stimulate them.”
Sulfate salts, he said, are inexpensive, readily soluble and easily
obtained.
In addition to Bethke and Kirk, the team included UI geology professor
Bruce Fouke, research scientist Robert Sanford, graduate students Jungho
Park and Gusheng Jin, and Illinois
State Water Survey project scientist Thomas Holm. The U.S. Department
of Energy funded the work.
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