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The adsorption process during inorganic phosphorus removal by cultured periphyton
2014
Lu, Haiying | Yang, Linzhang | Shabbir, Sadaf | Wu, Yonghong
To explain the detailed process involved in phosphorus removal by periphyton, the periphyton dominated by photoautotrophic microorganisms was employed in this study to remove inorganic phosphorus (P ᵢ ) from wastewater, and the removal kinetics and isotherms were then evaluated for the P ᵢ removal process. Results showed that the periphyton was capable of effectively removing P ᵢ that could completely remove the P ᵢ in 24 h at an initial P ᵢ concentration of 13 mg P L⁻¹. Furthermore, the P ᵢ removal process by the periphyton was dominated by adsorption at initial stage (~24 h), which involved physical mechanistic process. However, this P ᵢ adsorption process was significantly influenced by environmental conditions. This work provides an insight into the understanding of phosphorus adsorption by periphyton or similar microbial aggregates.
Show more [+] Less [-]Toxicity of atmospheric particle-bound PAHs: an environmental perspective
2014
Mesquita, Sofia Raquel | L. van Drooge, Barend | Barata, Carlos | Vieira, Natividade | Guimarães, Laura | Piña, Benjamin
Atmospheric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are environmental pollutants that represent a risk not only to humans, but to all living organisms. High-molecular weight PAHs are more toxic than lighter relatives, and also have a higher tendency to bind onto air particles (i.e., particle matter, PM). PM is a major constituent of air pollution. Adequate assessment of the biological impact of PM requires the analysis, not only of the effects on human health, but also on the environment. Since the aquatic systems work as a natural sink to these air pollutants, assessing the effects of particle-bound PAHs on aquatic organisms may further characterize its potential aquatic toxicity, also providing simple and low-cost alternative assays to investigate PM biological effects in vivo. We review the current scientific literature, addressing the atmospheric PAHs fate, transformation and deposition, pertinent particle-bound PAHs toxicity data, and the potential aquatic toxic burden. Conceptual and experimental procedures that could improve future investigations and risk assessments are also considered.
Show more [+] Less [-]Enhanced bioremediation of oil-polluted, hypersaline, coastal areas in Kuwait via vitamin-fertilization
2014
Al-Mailem, Dina M. | Eliyas, Mohamed | Raḍwān, Samīr Muḥammad
There is no research published sofar on managements that could bioremediate hypersaline soils and water polluted with hydrocarbons. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of vitamin amendment on hydrocarbon removal by microorganisms indigenous to such hypersaline environments. We used in this study ten hydrocarbonoclastic bacterial species and five archaeal species that had been isolated by the conventional plating method on media containing oil as a sole carbon source, from a hypersaline (3–4 M NaCl) coastal area in Kuwait, and characterized by sequencing of their 16S rRNA coding genes. The oil and pure hydrocarbon consumption was measured by gas–liquid chromatography. The oil and pure hydrocarbon consumption potential of all microorganisms in media with hypersalinity was enhanced by vitamin fertilization. This was true for individual microorganisms in pure cultures as well as for microbial consortia in hypersaline soil and water samples used as inocula. Most effective vitamins were thiamin, pyridoxine and vitamin B₁₂. Vitamin fertilization using vitamin rich wastes or byproducts could be an effective practice for enhancing bioremediation of oil contaminated hypersaline environments.
Show more [+] Less [-]Geochemical behavior of metals and metalloids in an estuary affected by acid mine drainage (AMD)
2014
Hierro, A. | Olías, M. | Ketterer, M. E. | Vaca, F. | Borrego, J. | Cánovas, C. R. | Bolivar, J. P.
The Tinto and Odiel rivers in southwest Spain drain the world’s largest sulfide mineral formation: the Iberian Pyrite Belt which has been worked since 2,500 BC. The Tinto and Odiel estuarine zones include both an extensive area of salt marsh and an intensively industrialized urban area. As a consequence of pyrite oxidation, the Tinto and Odiel rivers are strongly acidic (pH < 3) with unusually high and quite variable metal concentrations. In this study, seasonally varying concentrations of dissolved major and trace elements were determined in the acid mine drainage affected estuary of the Ría de Huelva. During estuarine mixing, ore-derived metal concentrations exhibit excellent correlations with pH as the main controlling parameter. As pH increases, concentrations of dissolved ore-associated elements are attenuated, and this process is enhanced during the summer months. The decrease in Fe and Al concentrations ranged from 80 to 100 % as these elements are converted from dissolved to sediment-associated forms in the estuary. Coprecipitation/adsorption processes also removed between 60 and 90 % of the originally dissolved Co, Cu, Mn, Pb, Zn, and Th; however, Cd and Ni exhibited a greater propensity to remain in solution, with an average removal of approximately 60 %. On the other hand, As and U exhibited a different behavior; it is likely that these elements remain in dissolved forms because of the formation of U carbonates and soluble As species. Concentrations of As remain at elevated levels in the outer estuary (average = 48 μg L⁻¹) which exceeds concentrations present in the Tinto River. Nevertheless, the estuary has recently witnessed improvements in water quality, as compared to results of several previous studies reported in the 1990s.
Show more [+] Less [-]Isolation and characterization of two novel strains capable of using cyclohexane as carbon source
2014
Salamanca, Diego | Engesser, Karl-Heinrich
Two strains capable of degrading cyclohexane were isolated from the soil and sludge of the wastewater treatment plant of the University of Stuttgart and a biotrickling filter system. The strains were classified as gram negative and identified as Acidovorax sp. CHX100 and Chelatococcus sp. CHX1100. Both strains have demonstrated the capability to degrade cycloalkanes (C5–C8), while only strain CHX1100 used as well short linear n-alkanes (C5–C8) as the sole source of carbon and energy. The growth of Acidovorax sp. CHX100 using cyclohexane was much faster compared to Chelatococcus sp. CHX1100. Degenerated primers were optimized from a set sequences of cyclohexanol dehydrogenase genes (chnA) as well as cyclohexanone monooxygenases (chnB) and used to amplify the gene cluster, which encodes the conversion of cyclohexanol to caprolactone. Phylogenetic analysis has indicated that the two gene clusters belong to different groups. The cyclohexane monooxygenase-induced activity which oxidizes also indole to 5-hydroxyindole has indicated the presence of a CYP-type system monooxygenase involved in the transformation of cyclohexane to cyclohexanol.
Show more [+] Less [-]Does area deprivation modify the association between exposure to a nitrate and low-dose atrazine metabolite mixture in drinking water and small for gestational age? A historic cohort study
2014
Limousi, F. | Albouy-Llaty, M. | Carles, C. | Dupuis, A. | Rabouan, S. | Migeot, V.
Birth weight may be influenced by environmental and socio-economic factors that could interact. The main objective of our research was to investigate whether area deprivation may modify the association between drinking water exposure to a mixture of atrazine metabolites and nitrates during the second trimester of pregnancy and prevalence of small for gestational age (SGA) neonates. We conducted a historic cohort study in Deux-Sèvres, France between 2005 and 2010, using birth records, population census and regularly performed drinking water withdrawals at community water systems. Exposure to an atrazine metabolite/nitrate mixture in drinking water was divided into six classes according to the presence or absence of atrazine metabolites and to the terciles of nitrate concentrations in each trimester of pregnancy. We used a logistic regression to model the association between SGA and mixture exposure at the second trimester while taking into account the area deprivation measured by the Townsend index as an effect modifier and controlling for the usual confounders. We included 10,784 woman–neonate couples. The risk of SGA when exposed to second tercile of nitrate without atrazine metabolites was significantly greater in women living in less deprived areas (OR = 2.99; 95 % CI (1.14, 7.89)), whereas it was not significant in moderately and more deprived areas. One of the arguments used to explain this result is the presence of competing risk factors in poorer districts.
Show more [+] Less [-]Phytoremediation potential of Pteris vittata L. under the combined contamination of As and Pb: beneficial interaction between As and Pb
2014
Wan, Xiao-ming | Lei, Mei | Chen, Tong-bin | Zhou, Guang-dong | Yang, Jun | Zhou, Xiao-yong | Zhang, Xi | Xu, Rui-xiang
The frequent co-existence of arsenic (As) and lead (Pb) necessitates the investigation of clean-up technologies for multi-metal(loid)s. Field survey and hydroponic experiments were conducted to elucidate the co-accumulation of As and Pb in Pteris vittata L. The P. vittata population isolated from a Pb–Zn mine in Yunnan province, China is a potential extractor of As and Pb co-contamination. Hydroponic experiment found that the highest frond As and Pb concentrations in mining population of P. vittata reached 12.2 and 0.99 g kg⁻¹, respectively. The interaction between As and Pb in P. vittata was further more disclosed. Pb (2 mg L⁻¹) improved the frond As concentration by 60 to 150 % in mining populations of P. vittata. Micro-X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicated that under the combined exposure of As and Pb, the As content in the rhizoid epidermis increased by about 10-fold, and the As(V) percentage increased in each rhizoid tissue, as compared with that under As exposure alone. The co-absorption of As and Pb on the epidermis and the enhanced transportation of As(V) from epidermis into the rhizoid were suggested to contribute to the increased As accumulation.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of the reaction artifacts in an annular denuder-based sampler resulting from the heterogeneous ozonolysis of naphthalene
2014
Goriaux, Mathieu | Pflieger, Maryline | Monod, Anne | Gligorovski, Sasho | Strekowski, Rafal S. | Wortham, Henri
The heterogeneous ozonolysis of naphthalene adsorbed on XAD-4 resin was studied using an annular denuder technique. The experiments involved depositing a known quantity of naphthalene on the XAD-4 resin and then measuring the quantity of the solid naphthalene that reacted away under a constant flow of gaseous ozone (0.064 to 4.9 ppm) for a defined amount of time. All experiments were performed at room temperature (26 to 30 °C) and atmospheric pressure. The kinetic rate coefficient for the ozonolysis reaction of naphthalene adsorbed on XAD-4 resin is reported to be (10.1 ± 0.4) × 10⁻¹⁹ cm³ molecule⁻¹ s⁻¹(error is 2σ, precision only). This value is five times greater than the currently recommended literature value for the homogeneous gas phase reaction of naphthalene with ozone. The obtained rate coefficient is used to evaluate reaction artifacts from field concentration measurements of naphthalene, acenaphthene, and phenanthrene. The observed uncertainties associated with field concentration measurements of naphthalene, acenaphthene, and phenanthrene are reported to be much higher than the uncertainties associated with the artifact reactions. Consequently, ozone reaction artifact appears to be negligible compared to the observed field measurement uncertainty results.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of a sulfonylurea herbicide on the soil bacterial community
2014
Arabet, Dallel | Tempel, Sébastien | Fons, Michel | Denis, Yann | Jourlin-Castelli, Cécile | Armitano, Joshua | Redelberger, David | Iobbi-Nivol, Chantal | Boulahrouf, Abderrahmane | Méjean, Vincent
Sulfonylurea herbicides are widely used on a wide range of crops to control weeds. Chevalier® OnePass herbicide is a sulfonylurea herbicide intensively used on cereal crops in Algeria. No information is yet available about the biodegradation of this herbicide or about its effect on the bacterial community of the soil. In this study, we collected an untreated soil sample, and another sample was collected 1 month after treatment with the herbicide. Using a high-resolution melting DNA technique, we have shown that treatment with Chevalier® OnePass herbicide only slightly changed the composition of the whole bacterial community. Two hundred fifty-nine macroscopically different clones were isolated from the untreated and treated soil under both aerobic and microaerobic conditions. The strains were identified by sequencing a conserved fragment of the 16S rRNA gene. The phylogenetic trees constructed using the sequencing results confirmed that the bacterial populations were similar in the two soil samples. Species belonging to the Lysinibacillus, Bacillus, Pseudomonas, and Paenibacillus genera were the most abundant species found. Surprisingly, we found that among ten strains isolated from the treated soil, only six were resistant to the herbicide. Furthermore, bacterial overlay experiments showed that only one resistant strain (related to Stenotrophomonas maltophilia) allowed all the sensitive strains tested to grow in the presence of the herbicide. The other resistant strains allowed only certain sensitive strains to grow. On the basis of these results, we propose that there must be several biodegradation pathways for this sulfonylurea herbicide.
Show more [+] Less [-]Distribution and ecological risk of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in surface sediments from the Bizerte lagoon, Tunisia
2014
Barhoumi, Badreddine | LeMenach, Karyn | Dévier, Marie-Hélène | El megdiche, Yassine | Hammami, Bechir | Ameur, Walid Ben | Hassine, Sihem Ben | Cachot, Jérôme | Budzinski, Hélène | Driss, Mohamed Ridha
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) were determined in 18 surface sediment samples collected from Bizerte lagoon, Tunisia. The total concentrations of ten PCBs (∑PCBs) and of four OCPs (∑OCPs) in the sediments from this area ranged from 0.8 to 14.6 ng g⁻¹dw (average value, 3.9 ng g⁻¹dw) and from 1.1 to 14.0 ng g⁻¹dw (average value, 3.3 ng g⁻¹dw), respectively. Among the OCPs, the range of concentrations of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and its metabolites (DDTs) and hexachlorobenzene (HCB) were 0.3–11.5 ng g⁻¹dw (1.9 ng g⁻¹dw) and 0.6–2.5 ng g⁻¹dw (1.4 ng g⁻¹dw), respectively. Compositional analyses of the POPs indicated that PCB 153, 138 and 180 were the predominant congeners accounting for 60 % of the total PCBs. In addition, p,p′-DDT was found to be the dominant DDTs, demonstrating recent inputs in the environment. Compared with some other regions of the world, the Bizerte lagoon exhibited low levels of PCBs and moderate levels of HCB and DDTs. The high ratios ΣPCBs/ΣDDTs indicated predominant industrial versus agricultural activities in this area. According to the established guidelines for sediment quality, the risk of adverse biological effects from such levels of OCPs and PCBs, as recorded at most of the study sites, was insignificant. However, the higher concentrations in stations S1 and S3 could cause biological damage.
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