Investigating eukaryotic fermentation as the likely source of unassigned dissolved inorganic carbon production in permeable sediments under anoxic conditions.
Abstract:
CaCO3 dissolution has been dismissed as a potential abiotic explanation for this unassigned DIC production on the basis of sample effluent analyses for alkalinity and Ca2+ and the observation that treating the sediments with HgCl2 inhibited all DIC production, suggesting a biotic source is likely. Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium using an intracellular pool of nitrate has also been dismissed as an explanation due to the concentration of nitrate in intracellular pools was determined to be negligible in relation to the DIC production.
The most likely explanation appears to be fermentation, whereby, organic carbon would be used as both the electron acceptor and donor. Experiments employing the use of two broad spectrum antibiotics, amoxicillin and ciprofloxacin, have revealed that DIC production continues unaffected, whilst established bacterial processes, like denitrification, are inhibited. This suggests that the source is eukaryotic. After approximately 48 hours of anoxia, dissolved hydrogen was detected at approximately 5 µM and increased to 72 µM over a 3 day period, representing 85% of the DIC production rate on a mole per mole basis. These are the first observations of hydrogen production in permeable sediments, and support the fermentation hypothesis, as hydrogen is a typical product of fermentative pathways.