(Press-News.org) An often-overlooked form of manganese, an element critical to many life processes, is far more prevalent in ocean environments than previously known, according to a study led by University of Delaware researchers that was published this week in "Science."
The discovery alters understanding of the chemistry that moves manganese and other elements, like oxygen and carbon, through the natural world. Manganese is an essential nutrient for most organisms and helps plants produce oxygen during photosynthesis.
"You wouldn't think manganese is that important, but without manganese, we wouldn't have the molecular oxygen that we breathe," said study co-author George Luther, Maxwell P. and Mildred H. Harrington Professor of Oceanography in the School of Marine Science and Policy within UD's College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment.
Manganese is present in the environment in three forms — manganese(II), manganese(III) and manganese(IV) — the difference related to the oxidation state, or number of electrons present. When elements lose or gain an electron, the oxidation state changes in a "redox reaction," like when iron turns into rust by losing electrons to oxygen in air.
The second-most common metal in the earth's crust, manganese rapidly changes between oxidation states while reacting with other elements in the environment.
Traditionally, manganese(II) and manganese(IV) were believed to be the dominant forms in aquatic environments. But in the mid-2000s, Luther found in a surprising result that manganese(III) was also present in a Black Sea "transition zone," an area where oxygen levels are relatively high near the surface but gradually diminish deeper down in the water.
Suspecting that this intermediary form was far more widespread than the somewhat unique conditions of the Black Sea, he and his Canadian colleagues Bjørn Sundby of the University of Quebec at Rimouski and Al Mucci of McGill University, whom he has worked with more than 20 years, set out for the largest estuary in the world: the Gulf of Saint Lawrence off the southeast corner of Canada.
There they pulled up samples of mud from the seafloor, where in the top few inches of sediment, there is also a transition zone of diminishing oxygen amounts. Andrew Madison, lead author on the Science paper and Luther's former graduate student, used a new technique to differentiate between manganese forms.
"It was a bit frustrating, and I spent about two and a half years working through methodological challenges and complications," said Madison, who finished his doctorate last year and now works as geochemist at Golder Associates Inc. in New Jersey. "But it was also pretty rewarding when I finally got something to work."
His results showed that manganese(III) comprised up to 90 percent of the total manganese present in the Canadian study sites. The implication is that the metal is found in other marine environments where there is a gradation of oxygen concentrations, whether in the water column of the Black Sea, sediment in the Gulf of Lawrence or a Delaware salt marsh.
"We saw it all through the Saint Laurentian Estuary where we studied," Luther said. "We did some work in a local salt marsh and found it. Wherever we've been able to look for it, we've found it. By implication, it should be found in all ocean sediments."
The findings help explain anomalies in manganese models that have puzzled scientists. Other researchers studying manganese did not make specific measurements for manganese(II) versus manganese(III), Luther said. Rather, they measured total dissolved manganese and assumed it was the former.
This missing link in the manganese cycle may shed light on the complex connections between the biology, geology and chemistry — called biogeochemistry — in ocean environments.
The biogeochemistry of marine sediments revolves around organic matter, like bits of dead algae, that fall through the water to the bottom of the ocean. Bacteria consume that debris, setting off a chain of reactions.
"In sediments, bacteria prefer to consume molecular oxygen and nitrate first due to their high energy gain," Madison said. "After those are consumed, bacteria then couple organic matter oxidation to manganese oxide reduction, which can produce soluble manganese(III)."
In their paper, the researchers call for the conceptual model of the sedimentary redox cycle to be revised to include dissolved manganese(III).
"Manganese is helpful to produce organic matter in the surface waters through photosynthesis," Luther said. "But in the sediments, the higher oxidation state manganese is used to decompose organic matter. So it's a really interesting cycle."
Luther, his students and his Oregon Health & Science University collaborator, Brad Tebo, plan to return to Canada to continue work on the microbiology and chemistry of the processes, hopefully to find out which organisms are helping the manganese oxidation process.
INFORMATION:
The study, titled "Abundant porewater Mn(III) is a major component of the sedimentary redox system," appears in the Aug. 23 issue of Science.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. The Delaware Sea Grant College Program supported the development of the technique to determine manganese species.
Morphing manganese
Researchers report discovery in Science about manganese in aquatic environments
2013-08-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Drug used for blood cancers may stop spread of breast cancer cells, Mayo Clinic finds
2013-08-23
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A drug used to treat blood cancers may also stop the spread of invasive breast cancer, researchers at Mayo Clinic in Florida have discovered. Their study, published online in Breast Cancer Research, found that in the lab and in animals, the drug decitabine turns on a gene coding for protein kinase D1 (PRKD1) that halts the ability of cancer cells to separate from a tumor and spread to distant organs.
"Treatment with low doses of decitabine in an animal model of breast cancer restored PRKD1 expression, reduced tumor size, and blocked metastasis to ...
Protein-based urine test predicts kidney transplant outcomes
2013-08-23
Levels of a protein in the urine of kidney transplant recipients can distinguish those at low risk of developing kidney injury from those at high risk, a study suggests. The results also suggest that low levels of this protein, called CXCL9, can rule out rejection as a cause of kidney injury. The study appears online Aug. 22 in the American Journal of Transplantation. The work was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.
To prevent rejection, kidney transplant recipients typically take immunosuppressive ...
Astronomers use Hubble images for movies featuring space slinky
2013-08-23
Astronomers have assembled, from more than 13 years of observations from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, a series of time-lapse movies showing a jet of superheated gas -- 5,000 light-years long -- as it is ejected from a supermassive black hole.
The movies promise to give astronomers a better understanding of how black holes shape galaxy evolution.
"Central, supermassive black holes are a key component in all big galaxies," said Eileen T. Meyer of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md. "Most of these black holes are believed to have gone through an active ...
Researchers figure out why gold nanoparticles can penetrate cell walls
2013-08-23
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- Cells are very good at protecting their precious contents — and as a result, it's very difficult to penetrate their membrane walls to deliver drugs, nutrients or biosensors without damaging or destroying the cell. One effective way of doing so, discovered in 2008, is to use nanoparticles of pure gold, coated with a thin layer of a special polymer. But nobody knew exactly why this combination worked so well, or how it made it through the cell wall.
Now, researchers at MIT and the Ecole Polytechnique de Lausanne in Switzerland have figured out how the ...
Computer simulations indicate calcium carbonate has a dense liquid phase
2013-08-23
Computer simulations conducted at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) could help scientists make sense of a recently observed and puzzling wrinkle in one of nature's most important chemical processes. It turns out that calcium carbonate—the ubiquitous compound that is a major component of seashells, limestone, concrete, antacids and myriad other naturally and industrially produced substances—may momentarily exist in liquid form as it crystallizes from solution.
Calcium carbonate is a huge player in the planet's carbon cycle, ...
A Pacific-wide satellite view catches Tropical Storm Pewa and a developing storm
2013-08-23
A view of the Pacific Ocean from NOAA's GOES-West satellite caught Tropical Storm Pewa moving through the Northwestern part of the ocean and two developing low pressure areas, one designated System 94E, several hundred miles off the Mexican coast.
NOAA's GOES-West satellite infrared imagery from today, Aug. 22 at 1200 UTC/8 a.m. EDT showed Tropical Storm Pewa heading west in the Northwestern Pacific. Pewa had a rounded circulation. The other two developing lows did not appear circular in the GOES-West image. The GOES image was created by the NASA GOES Project at NASA's ...
NASA catches Typhoon Trami's landfall in China
2013-08-23
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Typhoon Trami during the time it was making landfall in eastern China and captured an infrared view of the storm.
Typhoon Trami made landfall late on Aug. 21, and the storm was captured in infrared light by the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder/AIRS instrument that flies aboard NASA's Aqua satellite. The AIRS image, taken on Aug. 21 at 17:59 UTC/1:59 p.m. EDT showed that the most powerful thunderstorms were tightly wrapped around the storm's center during landfall.
AIRS data also showed bands of powerful thunderstorms feeding into the center ...
Agricultural fires in central Africa
2013-08-23
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite detected hundreds of fires burning in central Africa on August 21, 2013. The fires are outlined in red. Most of the fires burn in grass or cropland which is obscured by the smoke in this image.
The location, widespread nature, and number of fires suggest that these fires were deliberately set to manage land. Farmers often use fire to return nutrients to the soil and to clear the ground of unwanted plants. While fire helps enhance crops and grasses for pasture, the fires also produce smoke ...
Study adds lung damage to harmful effects of arsenic
2013-08-23
A new study confirms that exposure to low to moderate amounts of arsenic in drinking water can impair lung function. Doses of about 120 parts per billion of arsenic in well water—about 12 times the dose generally considered safe—produced lung damage comparable to decades of smoking tobacco. Smoking, especially by males, made arsenic-related damage even worse.
This is the first population-based study to clearly demonstrate significant impairment of lung function, in some cases extensive lung damage, associated with low to moderate arsenic exposure.
"Restrictive lung ...
UCLA Nursing study suggests focus on lifestyle changes -- not weight loss -- is key to kids' health
2013-08-23
A UCLA School of Nursing study has found that both healthy-weight and obese children who participated in an intensive lifestyle modification program significantly improved their metabolic and cardiovascular health despite little weight loss.
"These findings suggest that short-term lifestyle modifications through changing diet and exercise can have an immediate impact on improving risk factors such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes," said Christian Roberts, an associate research professor at the UCLA School of Nursing and the study's lead author. "This work underscores ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Better poverty mapping: New machine-learning approach targets aid more effectively
An emissions tale of two cities: Salt Lake City vs. Los Angeles
WVU nursing faculty aim to enhance rural home care for chronically ill through NIH award
New screening tool for stroke survivors with visual perception problems
Influencer marketing can help tourism industry mitigate waste, pollution
Tufts named a top producer of U.S. Fulbright students
Material’s ‘incipient’ property could jumpstart fast, low-power electronics
In preparing children for a racially unequal society, families of colour can benefit from more support, study finds
Student refines 100-year-old math problem, expanding wind energy possibilities
Immunity against seasonal H1N1 flu reduces bird flu severity in ferrets, study suggests
Do starchy carbs cause cavities?
New study supports caution regarding use of steroids
Treatment strategy reprograms brain cancer cells, halting tumor growth
Digital program reduces fall risk and boosts strength in older adults
Why brain cancer is often resistant to immunotherapy
The Obesity Society commends FDA's resolution of obesity drug shortages, calls for enforcement against unauthorized compounding
A new path to recovery: Scientists uncover key brain circuit in the fight against cocaine use disorder
Problem-based learning helps students stay in school
Blood test could lead to better diagnosis and management of ALS
Drug may prevent some migraine attacks in children and teens
Researchers make recommendations for promoting sustainable development in mangrove forest areas
Shark activity in South African reef revealed by citizen scientist scuba divers
Eavesdropping on whale songs sparks new discoveries in whale ecology
Teachers express extreme concern about influence of online misogyny on students
Bluesky is similarly structured to other social media, but with some unusual features
Fossil eggshells from Utah's Cedar Mountain Formation include Cretaceous period eggs from 3 feathered bird-like dinosaurs, 2 herbivorous dinosaurs, and a crocodile-like species found for the first tim
Study: Extreme heat may speed up aging in older adults
A springtail-like jumping robot
When the wild things are: URI team reports on mammalian daily activity with surprising results
Morphing robot turns challenging terrain to its advantage
[Press-News.org] Morphing manganeseResearchers report discovery in Science about manganese in aquatic environments