Abstract

The use of nuclear power has been a significant part of the United Kingdom’s energy portfolio with the Sellafield site being used for power production and more recently reprocessing and decommissioning of spent nuclear fuel activities. Before being reprocessed, spent nuclear fuel is stored in water ponds with significant levels of background radioactivity and in high alkalinity (to minimize fuel corrosion). Despite these challenging conditions, the presence of microbial communities has been detected. To gain further insight into the microbial communities present in extreme environments, an indoor, hyper-alkaline, oligotrophic, and radioactive spent fuel storage pond (INP) located on the Sellafield site was analyzed. Water samples were collected from sample points within the INP complex, and also the purge water feeding tank (FT) that supplies water to the pond, and were screened for the presence of the 16S and 18S rRNA genes to inform sequencing requirements over a period of 30 months. Only 16S rRNA genes were successfully amplified for sequencing, suggesting that the microbial communities in the INP were dominated by prokaryotes. Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR) analysis targeting 16S rRNA genes suggested that bacterial cells in the order of 104–106 mL–1 were present in the samples, with loadings rising with time. Next generation Illumina MiSeq sequencing was performed to identify the dominant microorganisms at eight sampling times. The 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis suggested that 70% and 91% from of the OTUs samples, from the FT and INP respectively, belonged to the phylum Proteobacteria, mainly from the alpha and beta subclasses. The remaining OTUs were assigned primarily to the phyla Acidobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and, Cyanobacteria. Overall the most abundant genera identified were Hydrogenophaga, Curvibacter, Porphyrobacter, Rhodoferax, Polaromonas, Sediminibacterium, Roseococcus, and Sphingomonas. The presence of organisms most closely related to Hydrogenophaga species in the INP areas, suggests the metabolism of hydrogen as an energy source, most likely linked to hydrolysis of water caused by the stored fuel. Isolation of axenic cultures using a range of minimal and rich media was also attempted, but only relatively minor components (from the phylum Bacteroidetes) of the pond water communities were obtained, emphasizing the importance of DNA-based, not culture-dependent techniques, for assessing the microbiome of nuclear facilities.

Highlights

  • Nuclear power supplies about 11% of the world’s electricity (WNA, 2016), and with increasing global energy demands this seems unlikely to decline

  • The present research was focused on characterizing the microbial community of a Sellafield indoor alkaline spent fuel storage pond (INP) complex containing main ponds (MP), subponds (SP) and a feeding head tank (FT) over a period of 30 months

  • The results showed that bacteria affiliated with a range of phylogenetic groups are able to survive and colonize the different areas across the INP complex

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Summary

Introduction

Nuclear power supplies about 11% of the world’s electricity (WNA, 2016), and with increasing global energy demands this seems unlikely to decline. In the United Kingdom, this task is performed at Sellafield, one of the largest and most complex nuclear sites in Europe. Calder Hall, located on the site, was the world’s first commercial nuclear power station, and here, energy was generated from 1956 to 2003. The Sellafield site contains a range of storage ponds built during the 1950s which were intended to support the production of weapon-grade plutonium, and more recently fuels from the United Kingdom’s fleet of nuclear power stations (Reddy et al, 2012; WNA, 2018b). The legacy of activities have left a complex range of nuclear operations at Sellafield, including the decommissioning of redundant facilities associated with the site’s early defense work, and spent fuel management including Magnox and Oxide fuel reprocessing (Gov UK, 2018)

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