Current Microbiology, Vol.59, No.1, 71-77, 2009
Microbial Communities in Acid Mine Drainage and Their Interaction with Pyrite Surface
Microbes such as Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and Leptospirillum ferrooxidans have been investigated a lot, because of their important role in acid mine drainage (AMD) generation. In this article, the composition of microbial communities in two AMD samples was studied. A culture-independent 16S rDNA-based cloning approach, restriction fragment length polymorphism has been used. The interaction between microbes and natural pyrite specimen surface was researched by scanning electrode microscopy (SEM) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The phylogenetic analysis revealed bacteria in these two samples fell into three major groups: Proteobacteria, Nitrospira, and Firmicutes. Archaea was also detected in these two samples. Thermoplasma and Ferroplasma lineages were abundant. From SEM and FISH, a number of A. ferrooxidans, a few cells of Archaea and Acidiphilium were detected adsorbed on the pyrite specimen surface. Leptospirillum sp. (hybridize with the probe LF655) has not been detected to be present on the pyrite specimen surface.