Hydrogeological and geological partitioning of iron and sulfur cycling bacterial consortia in subsurface coal-based mine waters

Andre Soares, Sara Maria Edwards Rassner*, Arwyn Edwards, Gareth Farr, Nia Blackwell, Henrik Sass, Guglielmo Persiani, David Schofield, Andrew C. Mitchell

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Pyrite oxidation drives iron and sulfur availability across Earth’s subsurface and is partly microbially mediated. Subsurface microbial communities accelerate this process at circumneutral pH directly by weathering pyritic surfaces and indirectly by causing changes to the surrounding microenvironment, thereby further accelerating pyrite weathering. However, our understanding of community structure dynamics and associated biogeochemistry in Fe- and S-rich lithologies, e.g. pyritic coal, is limited. Here, we present the first comprehensive regional and seasonal genus-level survey of bacterial groundwater communities in a pyritic coal-based aquifer in the South Wales Coalfield (SWC), using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Seasonal changes in community structure were limited, suggesting limited influence of surface processes on subsurface communities. Instead, hydrogeologically distinct mine water blocks (MWB) and coal rank largely explained bacterial community structure variation across sites. Fe(II)-oxidizing Betaproteobacteriales genera Gallionella and Sideroxydans dominated the bacterial communities across nine sites and seven MWBs, while three sites within a single MWB, were dominated by S-oxidizing Epsilonbacteraeota genera Sulfuricurvum and Sulfurovum. The cooccurrence of pairs of Fe(II)- and S-oxidizing bacterial genera suggests functional redundancy, which coupled with genus-specific morphologies and life strategies, indicates the importance of distinct environmental and ecological niches within the SWC groundwater at seasonal and regional scales.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberfiaf039
Number of pages15
JournalFEMS Microbiology Ecology
Volume101
Issue number5
Early online date09 Apr 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 May 2025

Keywords

  • bacterial community structure
  • biogeochemistry
  • Fe-oxidizing bacteria
  • pyritic coal-based aquifers
  • S-oxidizing bacteria
  • subsurface microbial ecology

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