This research focuses on the formation of Ca-Mg carbonates
by Halomonas anticariensis in solid media at different salt
concentration and incubation time, and discusses the possible
role of metabolic activity, bacteria surfaces and carbonic
anhydrase in precipitation. Mineral saturation indexes of the
solutions indicate that inorganic precipitation of different
carbonates is possible in all media used but their precipitation
did not occur in sterile control experiments. On the other hand
H. anticariensis produced different Ca-Mg carbonates
depending on salt concentration and Mg+2/Ca+2 ratios, in spite
of its weak carbonic anhydrase activity. Incubation time does
not influence the nature of the precipitates. At low salinity H.
anticariensis precipitates magnesium calcite. A Ca-Mg
carbonate phase with very small particle size, high lattice
distortion (strain) and lattice parameters similar to those of
disordered kutnohorite is presented and this phase is here
referred to as non-stoichiometric calcium- rich dolomite, formed
at high salinity. These Calcium-rich dolomites are rarely
present in most natural habitats because this phase is thermo
dynamically 32 metastable and it is subsequently transformed
into calcite and dolomite.
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This research focuses on the formation of Ca-Mg carbonates
by Halomonas anticariensis in solid media at different salt
concentration and incubation time, and discusses the possible
role of metabolic activity, bacteria surfaces and carbonic
anhydrase in precipitation. Mineral saturation indexes of the
solutions indicate that inorganic precipitation of different
carbonates is possible in all media used but their precipitation
did not occur in sterile control experiments. On the other hand...
»