An attempt was made to isolate bacterial strains capable of biologically removing tungstate (WO 4 2-). Thirty-eight water samples were collected from various areas of Anzali lagoon, Iran. Initial screening of a total of 100 bacterial isolates at pH 5, resulted in the selection of one isolate with maximum adsorption capacity of 65.4 mg tungstate/g dry weight. It was tentatively identified as Bacillus sp. according to morphological and biochemical properties and named strain MGG-83. Tungsten concentration was measured spectrophotometrically using the dithiol method. Higher adsorption capacity was observed in the acidic pH ranging from 1 to 3. At pH 2, the strain removed 274.4 mg tungstate/g dry weight within 5 min from the solution with 300 mg WO 4 2-/l initial concentration and thereafter adsorption rate decreased remarkably. The applicability of the Freundlich isotherm for representation of the experimental data was investigated. Using 1 mM sodium azide and 10 mM 2,4-dinitrophenol, it was shown that only 20% reduction occurred in adsorption and steam sterilization of the bacterial cells resulted in 11% decrease in tungstate uptake. Temperature variations (20-40°C) had no significant effect on tungstate uptake. Pretreatment with the cations had no effect in uptake but pretreatment with anions decreased the tungstate uptake as indicated: sulfate > chromate > nitrate > molybdate > selenate > rhenate. Tungstate was removed from metal-laden biomass after desorption treatments by addition of different desorbing solutions with the results sodium acetate > EDTA > NaCl > KOH > H 2 SO 4 .
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