Interaction of temperature, salinity and extracellular polymeric substances controls trace element incorporation into tufa calcite

The influence of extracellular polymeric substances on carbonate mineral growth in natural settings remains one of the most poorly understood contributors to the growth of non‐marine carbonate sediments. The influences of these materials are complicated by their association with living cells creatin...

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Veröffentlicht in:The depositional record 2022-02, Vol.8 (1), p.210-219
Hauptverfasser: Rogerson, Mike, Pedley, H. Martyn, Greenway, Gillian M., Wadhawan, Jay D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The influence of extracellular polymeric substances on carbonate mineral growth in natural settings remains one of the most poorly understood contributors to the growth of non‐marine carbonate sediments. The influences of these materials are complicated by their association with living cells creating local microenvironments via metabolism and enzyme production, and by our uncertainty about the extracellular polymeric substances materials themselves. Different mixtures of extracellular polymeric substance molecules may behave in different ways, and differences in the local physical environment may alter how the mixtures influence mineral formation, and even result in different patterns of polymerization. Here, the influence of extracellular polymeric substances on calcite precipitation rate and Mg/Cacalcite in the absence of cells is investigated using extracts of extracellular polymeric substances from temperate fluvial tufa biofilm. The influence is complex, with the concentration of extracellular polymeric substances in solution altering deposition rate and trace element incorporation. Moreover, the results show interaction of the presence/absence of extracellular polymeric substances and both temperature and salinity. However, despite extracting extracellular polymeric substances from the same parent sample, a uniform influence was not found in these experiments, implying that the mixture is sufficiently variable within a sample for microenvironments within the biofilm to either promote or inhibit mineralization. As sedimentologists, we can no longer take the view that extracellular polymeric substances are a bystander material, or that they have a single set of coherent and predictable or intuitive influences. Rather, the emphasis must be on investigating the specific mixtures present in nature, and their complex and dynamic interaction with both mineral surfaces and hydrochemical conditions. The influence of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) on carbonate mineral growth in natural settings remains one of the most poorly understood contributors to the growth of non‐marine carbonate sediments. We find interaction of EPS presence/absence and both temperature and salinity, but despite extracting EPS mass from the same parent sample, we do not find uniform influence. We conclude that as sedimentologists, we can no longer take the view that EPS are a "bystander" material, or that they have a single set of coherent and predictable or intuitive influenc
ISSN:2055-4877
2055-4877
DOI:10.1002/dep2.160