Article

Organic matter from redoximorphic soils accelerates and sustains microbial Fe(III) reduction

Details

Citation

Fritzsche A, Bosch J, Sander M, Schroeder C, Byrne JM, Ritschel T, Joshi P, Maisch M, Meckenstock RU, Kappler A & Totsche KU (2021) Organic matter from redoximorphic soils accelerates and sustains microbial Fe(III) reduction. Environmental Science and Technology, 55 (15), pp. 10821-10831. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c01183

Abstract
Microbial reduction of Fe(III) minerals is a prominent process in redoximorphic soils and is strongly affected by organic matter (OM). We herein determined the rate and extent of microbial reduction of ferrihydrite (Fh) with either adsorbed or coprecipitated OM by Geobacter sulfurreducens. We focused on OM-mediated effects on electron uptake and alterations in Fh crystallinity. The OM was obtained from anoxic soil columns (effluent OM, efOM) and included –unlike water-extractable OM– compounds released by microbial activity under anoxic conditions. We found that organic molecules in efOM had generally no or only very low electron- accepting capacity and were incorporated into the Fh aggregates when coprecipitated with Fh. Compared to OM-free Fh, adsorption of efOM to Fh decelerated the microbial Fe(III) reduction by passivating the Fh surface towards electron uptake. In contrast, coprecipitation of Fh with efOM accelerated the microbial reduction, likely because efOM disrupted the Fh structure as noted by Mössbauer spectroscopy. Additionally, adsorbed and co-precipitated efOM resulted in a more sustained Fe(III) reduction, potentially because efOM could have effectively scavenged biogenic Fe(II) and prevented the passivation of the Fh surface by adsorbed Fe(II). Fe(III)-OM coprecipitates forming at anoxic-oxic interfaces are thus likely readily reducible by Fe(III)- reducing bacteria in redoximorphic soils.

Keywords
Mössbauer spectroscopy; mediated electrochemical reduction; electron-accepting capacity; ferrihydrite; iron oxide; dissolved organic matter; DOM

Journal
Environmental Science and Technology: Volume 55, Issue 15

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2021
Publication date online21/07/2021
Date accepted by journal01/07/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32964
ISSN0013-936X
eISSN1520-5851

People (1)

People

Dr Christian Schroeder

Dr Christian Schroeder

Senior Lecturer, Biological and Environmental Sciences