The family Ectothiorhodospiraceae is of special interest because, unlike other purple sulfur bacteria, these organisms oxidize H
2S and produce S
0 outside of the cell but also because some species are extremely halophilic and are among the most halophilic of all known prokaryotes.
These organisms are typically found in marine environments, saline lakes, soda lakes, and salterns.
Purple bacteria that utilize hydrogen sulfide (H
2S) as an electron donor for CO
2 reduction to photosynthesis are known as puple sulfur bacteria.
The sulfide is oxidized to elemental sulfur (S
0) that is deposited
outside the cells.
Many purple sulfur bacteria can also use other reduced sulfur compounds as photosynthetic electron donors, thiosulfate (S
2O
32-) being a key one commonly used to grow laboratory cultures of these organisms.
Purple sulfur bacteria are generally found in illuminated anoxic zones of lakes and other aquatic habitats where H
2S accumulates, and also in "sulfur springs," where geochemically or biologically produced H
2S can trigger the formations of blooms of purple sulfur bacteria.
The most favorable lakes for development of puple sulfur bacteria are meromictic (permanently stratified) lakes.
Meromictic lakes stratify because they have denser (usually saline) water in the bottom and less dense (usually freshwater) nearer the surface.
If sufficient sulfate is present to support sulfate reduction, the sulfide, produced in the sediments, diffuses upward into the anoxic bottom waters, and here purple sulfur bacteria can form massive blooms, usually in association with
green sulfur phototrophic bacteria.
For more information on Purple Phototrphic Bacteria
click here.
Taken from the text Brock Biology of Microorganisms (10th ed.). Madigan, M.T., Martinko, J.M., and Parker, J. 2003. Prentice Hall. 355p.