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Morphology and Size of Bacterial Colonies Control Anoxic Microenvironment Formation in Porous Media. | LitMetric

Bacterial metabolisms using electron acceptors other than oxygen (e.g., methanogenesis and fermentation) largely contribute to element cycling and natural contaminant attenuation/mobilization, even in well-oxygenated porous environments, such as shallow aquifers. This paradox is commonly explained by the occurrence of small-scale anoxic microenvironments generated by the coupling of bacterial respiration and dissolved oxygen (O) transport by pore water. Such microenvironments allow facultative anaerobic bacteria to proliferate in oxic environments. Microenvironment dynamics are still poorly understood due to the challenge of directly observing biomass and O distributions at the microscale within an opaque sediment matrix. To overcome these limitations, we integrated a microfluidic device with transparent O planar optical sensors to measure the temporal behavior of dissolved O concentrations and biomass distributions with time-lapse videomicroscopy. Our results reveal that bacterial colony morphology, which is highly variable in flowing porous systems, controls the formation of anoxic microenvironments. We rationalize our observations through a colony-scale Damköhler number comparing dissolved O diffusion and a bacterial O uptake rate. Our Damköhler number enables us to predict the pore space fraction occupied by anoxic microenvironments in our system for a given bacterial organization.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c05842DOI Listing

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