One of the outstanding current problems in both geobiology and environmental microbiology is the quantitative analysis of in situ microbial metabolic activities. Techniques capable of such analysis would have wide application, from quantifying natural rates of biogeochemical cycling to identifying the metabolic activity of uncultured organisms. We describe here a method that represents one step towards that goal, namely the high-precision measurement of C in specific populations of microbial cells that are purified by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventeen sediment cores collected in the Strait of Georgia reveal a history of mercury contamination that began in the 1860s and include episodic contamination during World War II and in the late 1960s. Surface sediment mercury concentrations ranged from 60 to 420 ng/g dry weight and the current fluxes to sediments are estimated at 5-181 ng cm(-2) a(-1). In one location in Port Moody Arm, a Hg spill seems to have sufficiently poisoned the sediments to eliminate biomixing for about 20 years.
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