Experiments were carried out to evaluate the impact of the addition of ripe compost on the degradation of two 14C-labeled hydrocarbon model compounds (anthracene and hexadecane) in soil. The addition of mature compost (20% dry wt./dry wt) stimulated significantly the disappearance of the extractable fraction of both compounds. With compost, 23% of the labeled anthracene was transformed into 14CO2 and 42% was fixed to the soil matrix irreversibly. In the unsupplemented control reactor, more than 88% of the original anthracene could be recovered by either of two organic extraction procedures. THe formation of non-extractable bound residues was significantly less with 14C-hexadecane since only 21% of the labeled carbon had become non-extractable after 103 days. The results presented show that compost could stimulate the depletion of hydrocarbons by either mineralization or the formation of unextractable bound residues (humification). The latter process might be a significant route of depletion in soil especially, for those hydrocarbons that are mineralized only slowly. The meaning of this finding for the assessment of soil bioremediation is discussed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00166937DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

anthracene hexadecane
8
bound residues
8
soil
5
fate 14c-labeled
4
anthracene
4
14c-labeled anthracene
4
hexadecane compost-manured
4
compost-manured soil
4
soil experiments
4
experiments carried
4

Similar Publications

sp. strain p52, an aerobic dioxin degrader, was capable of utilizing petroleum hydrocarbons as the sole sources of carbon and energy for growth. In the present study, the degradation of the mixture of aliphatic hydrocarbons (hexadecane and tetradecane) and aromatic hydrocarbons (phenanthrene and anthracene) by strain p52 was examined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Studying Rhodococcus erythropolis stress response is of significant scientific interest, since this microorganism is widely used for bioremediation of oil-contaminated sites and is essential for environmental biotechnology. In addition, much less data was published on molecular mechanisms of stress resistance and adaptation to effects of pollutants for Gram-positive oil degraders compared to Gram-negative ones. This study provided an assessment of changes in the transcription level of the soxR, sodA, sodC, oxyR, katE, katG, recA, dinB, sigF, sigH genes in the presence of decane, hexadecane, cyclohexane, benzene, naphthalene, anthracene and diesel fuel.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Environmental pollution with aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons caused by oil and petrochemical industries has very toxic and carcinogenic effects on living organisms and should be removed from the environment. In this research, after analyzing the oil sludge of the Bahregan area, it was found that most aliphatic paraffin compounds are related to octadecane, most liquid aliphatic compounds are related to hexadecane, and most aromatic compounds are related to naphthalene, phenanthrene, fluoranthene, and anthracene. Then, we investigated the ability of native bacteria from this area, such as Thalassospira, Chromohalobacter, and a bacterial consortium, to biodegrade the dominant aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons found in oil sludge.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microbial Consortium HJ-SH with Very High Degradation Efficiency of Phenanthrene.

Microorganisms

September 2023

Department of Biochemical Engineering, School of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Tianjin University, Tianjin 300072, China.

Phenanthrene (PHE) is one of the model compounds of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). In this study, a natural PHE-degrading microbial consortium, named HJ-SH, with very high degradation efficiency was isolated from soil exposed to long-term PHE contamination. The results of GC analysis showed that the consortium HJ-SH degraded 98% of 100 mg/L PHE in 3 days and 93% of 1000 mg/L PHE in 5 days, an efficiency higher than that of any other natural consortia, and even most of the engineered strains and consortia reported so far.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Solute - solvent repulsion effects on the absorption spectra of anthracene in n-hexane investigated under high pressure.

Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc

October 2023

Faculty of Chemistry, Adam Mickiewicz University, Uniwersytetu Poznańskiego 8, 61-614 Poznań, Poland. Electronic address:

The band positions in the UV-VIS absorption spectra of compressed solution of anthracene in n-hexane significantly depend not only on the dispersive but also on the repulsive solute-solvent interactions, what has so far been omitted. Their strength is determined not only by the solvent polarity but also by Onsager cavity radius changing with pressure. The results obtained for anthracene show that repulsive interactions should be included in the interpretation of barochromic and solvatochromic results of aromatic compounds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!