| Literature DB >> 26849913 |
Marta Barbato1, Francesca Mapelli1, Mirko Magagnini2, Bessem Chouaia1, Monica Armeni2, Ramona Marasco3, Elena Crotti1, Daniele Daffonchio4, Sara Borin5.
Abstract
Petroleum pollution results in co-contamination by different classes of molecules, entailing the occurrence of marine sediments difficult to remediate, as in the case of the Ancona harbor (Mediterranean Sea, Italy). Autochthonous bioaugmentation (ABA), by exploiting the indigenous microbes of the environment to be treated, could represent a successful bioremediation strategy. In this perspective we aimed to i) identify the main drivers of the bacterial communities' richness in the sediments, ii) establish enrichment cultures with different hydrocarbon pollutants evaluating their effects on the bacterial communities' composition, and iii) obtain a collection of hydrocarbon degrading bacteria potentially exploitable in ABA. The correlation between the selection of different specialized bacterial populations and the type of pollutants was demonstrated by culture-independent analyses, and by establishing a collection of bacteria with different hydrocarbon degradation traits. Our observations indicate that pollution dictates the diversity of sediment bacterial communities and shapes the ABA potential in harbor sediments.Entities:
Keywords: Alcanivorax; Autochthonous bioaugmentation; Bacterial community; Oil contamination; Pyrosequencing
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26849913 DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2016.01.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Pollut Bull ISSN: 0025-326X Impact factor: 5.553