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Repeated inoculation as a strategy for the remediation of low concentrations of phenanthrene in soil
Authors:Egbert Schwartz  Kate M. Scow
Affiliation:(1) Graduate Group in Ecology and Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California at Davis, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616-8627, USA;(2) University of California, 151 Hilgard Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3110, USA
Abstract:
Phenanthrene, a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, becomes increasingly unavailable to microorganisms for degradation as it ages in soil. Consequently, many bioaugmentation efforts to remediate polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in soil have failed. We studied theeffect of repeatedly inoculating a soil with a phenanthrene-degrading Arthrobacter sp. on the mineralization kinetics of low concentrations of phenanthrene. After the first inoculation, the initial mineralization rate of 50 ng/g phenanthrene declined in a biphasicexponential pattern. By three hundred hours after inoculation, there was no difference in mineralization rates between the inoculated and uninoculated treatments even though a large fraction of the phenanthrene had not yet been mineralized. A second and third inoculation significantly increased the mineralization rate, suggesting that, though themineralization rate declined, phenanthrene remained bioavailable. Restirring the soil, without inoculation, did not produce similar increases in mineralization rates, suggesting absence of contact between cells and phenanthrene on a larger spatial scale (>mm) is not the cause of the mineralization decline. Bacteria inoculated into soil 280 hours beforethe phenanthrene was added could not maintain phenanthrene degradation activity. We suggest sorption lowered bioavailability of phenanthrene below an induction threshold concentration for metabolic activity of phenanthrene-degrading bacteria.
Keywords:bioaugmentation  bioavailability  bioremediation  phenanthrene degradation  sorption
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