The biogeochemistry of acid mine drainage (AMD) derived from waste rock associated sulfide mineral oxidation is relatively well-characterized and linked to spp.. However, little is understood about the microbial communities and sulfur cycling before AMD develops, a key component of its prevention. This study aimed to examine circum-neutral mining impacted water (MIW) communities and its laboratory enrichments for sulfur oxidizing bacteria (SoxBac). MIW microbial communities differed in diversity, structure and relative abundance consistent with site specific variations in total aqueous sulfur concentrations (TotS; ~2-17 mM), pH (3.67-7.34), and oxygen (22-93% saturation). However, the sulfur oxidizer, spp. dominated seven of the nine total SoxBac enrichment communities (~76-100% relative abundance), spanning three of the four mines. The presence and relative abundance of the identified sixteen known and five unclassified spp. here, were the important clustering determinants across parent MIW and enrichment communities. Further, the presence of spp. was associated with driving the pH <4 in enrichment experiments, and the combination of specific spp. in the enrichments affected the observed acid to sulfate ratios indicating differential sulfur cycling. spp. also dominated the parent communities of the two acidic MIWs providing corroborating evidence for its active role in net acid generation within these waters. These results identify a putative indicator organism specific to mine tailings reservoirs and highlight the need for further study of tailings associated sulfur cycling for better mine management and environmental stewardship.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6418380PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.00297DOI Listing

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