| Literature DB >> 32445124 |
Jyoti Prakash Maity1,2, Yi-Hsun Huang1, Hsien-Feng Lin1, Chien-Yen Chen3,4.
Abstract
The study targeted an assessment of microbial diversity during oil spill in the marine ecosystem (Kaohsiung port, Taiwan) and screened dominant indigenous bacteria for oil degradation, as well as UCM weathering. DO was detected lower and TDS/conductivity was observed higher in oil-spilled area, compared to the control, where a significant correlation (R2 = 1; P < 0.0001) was noticed between DO and TDS. The relative abundance (RA) of microbial taxa and diversities (> 90% similarity by NGS) were found higher in the boundary region of spilled-oily-water (site B) compared to the control (site C) and center of the oil spill area (site A) (BRA/diversity > CRA/diversity > ARA/diversity). The isolated indigenous bacteria, such as Staphylococcus saprophyticus (CYCTW1), Staphylococcus saprophyticus (CYCTW2), and Bacillus megaterium (CYCTW3) degraded the C10-C30 including UCM of oil, where Bacillus sp. are exhibited more efficient, which are applicable for environmental cleanup of the oil spill area. Thus, the marine microbial diversity changes due to oil spill and the marine microbial community play an important role to biodegrade the oil, besides restoring the catastrophic disorders through changing their diversity by ecological selection and adaptation process.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous bacteria; Marine oil spill; Microbial diversity; Oil degradation; Oil removal from water; UCM weathering
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32445124 DOI: 10.1007/s12010-020-03335-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Biochem Biotechnol ISSN: 0273-2289 Impact factor: 2.926