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India, Bangladesh: bacteria responsible for arsenic
in ground water
UK researchers claim to have identified the process responsible for
contaminating groundwater with arsenic, a phenomenon that endangers
the health of tens of millions of people, mostly in Bangladesh and
India [1]. Their findings could help identify areas at risk, and
eventually lead to ways of cleaning up contaminated water. Bacteria
were found to be responsible for the release of arsenic into water
from surrounding earth. The microbes gain energy by changing the
chemistry of minerals containing both iron and arsenic, and release
the arsenic into the water as a by-product of the reaction. Without
such bacterial activity, the arsenic would remain in an insoluble
form, and thus be unable to contaminate the water. The researchers
collected earth samples at a depth of 13 metres from a site in West
Bengal, India, known to have relatively high concentrations of arsenic
in the water. The samples were mixed with groundwater in a laboratory
and exposed to a range of biological, geological and chemical factors.
The scientists found that arsenic was only released from the earth
samples in the absence of oxygen, and that the presence of organic
matter, derived from decaying animal and plant life, enhanced this
process.
[1] Islam, F.S. ... [et al.] (2004). Role of metal-reducing bacteria
in arsenic release from Bengal delta sediments. Nature, vol. 430, no.
6995 ; p. 68-71.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature02638
Contact: Jonathan R. Lloyd, Dept. of Earth Sciences and Williamson
Research Centre for Molecular Environmental Science, University of
Manchester, jon.lloyd@man.ac.uk,
http://www.earth.man.ac.uk/general/people/bio.php?id=41...
Source:
SciDev, 1 Jul 2004
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