LESSONS FROM ARSENIC RESEARCH IN BANGLADESH: ITS IMPLICATION FOR THE SUSTAINABILITY OF AQUIFERS AS LONG TERM SAFE WATER SOURCES
The spatial extent of the problem and the fact that the most severely contaminated areas are in the geologically distinct low-lying flood plain, support the idea that the sediments themselves are the most likely arsenic source. However, the mobility of arsenic in the subsurface is influenced by a combination of the dissolved species present, minerals in aquifer solids, microbial activity, and by ambient geochemical parameters such as redox conditions. The results from a detailed biogeochemical investigation of As in lower Pleistocene aquifers provides a unique opportunity to better understand the hydrological, geochemical and microbial interactions. A series of laboratory anaerobic incubations were conducted in replicate over 90 days using preserved Pleistocene orange sands duly amended by organic substrates; lactate and inoculated with metal-reducing bacteria "Shewanella sp. ANA-3". The observations indicate that metal-reducers such as Shewanella can trigger As release to groundwater by converting sedimentary As to a more mobilizable form without the addition of high levels of labile carbon. Such interactions need to be better understood to determine the vulnerability of low-As aquifers from which drinking water is increasingly drawn in Bangladesh and/or in similar deltaic environments in the world.