Microbial activity is the driving force of the carbon cycle, including the digestion of biomass in the soil, oceans, and oil deposits. This natural diversity of microbial carbon sources poses challenges for humans. Contamination monitoring can be difficult in oil tanks and similar settings. To assess microbial activity in such industrial settings, off-gas analysis can be employed by considering growth and non-growth-associated metabolic activity. In this work, we describe the monitoring of CO as a method for measuring microbial activity. We revealed that the CO signal corresponds to classical growth curves, exemplified by , , and . Deviations of the CO signal from the growth curves occurred when the yield of biomass on the substrate changed (i.e., the non-growth-associated metabolic activities). We monitored CO to track the onset of microbial contamination in an oil tank. This experimental setup was applied to determine the susceptibility of heating oil and biodiesel to microbial contamination long before the formation of problematic biofilms. In summary, the measurement of CO production by bacteria, yeasts, and molds allowed the permanent monitoring of microbial activity under oil storage conditions without invasive sampling.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9349135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/elsc.202100144DOI Listing

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