Science Inventory

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE CONCENTRATION OF DENITRIFIERS AND PSEUDOMONAS SPP. IN SOILS: IMPLICATIONS FOR BTX BIOREMEDIATION (R823420)

Citation:

Vermace, M. E., R. F. Christensen, G. F. Parkin, AND P. J. Alvarez. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE CONCENTRATION OF DENITRIFIERS AND PSEUDOMONAS SPP. IN SOILS: IMPLICATIONS FOR BTX BIOREMEDIATION (R823420). WATER RESEARCH. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 30(12):3139-3145, (1996).

Description:

Aquifer microcosms were used to investigate the effect of stimulating denitrification on microbial population shifts and BTX degradation potential. Selective pressure
for facultative denitrifiers was applied to a treatment set by feeding acetate and nitrate, and cycling electron acceptor conditions twice between aerobic and
denitrifying stages. A second (control) set degraded the same amount of acetate under aerobic conditions. The resulting concentrations of total heterotrophs were not
significantly different between the two sets. Nevertheless, the concentrations of denitrifiers, Pseudomonas spp., and BTX degraders were significantly higher in the
cycled microcosms than in the aerobic controls. The predominant isolates from the cycled microcosms were fluorescent Pseudomonas species that are known to
degrade BTX. Following the complete removal of acetate, cycled microcosms also showed higher aerobic BTX degradation activity. These results suggest that
nitrate addition to oxygen-limited aquifers might enhance BTX bioremediation not only by supplementing the electron acceptor pool as is widely accepted, but also
by fostering favorable changes in the composition of the microbial consortium. Specifically, denitrifying conditions could have the ancillary benefit of fortuitously
selecting for Pseudomonas spp. that can degrade BTX. This syllogism is supported by a survey of international soils (from France, Denmark, Brazil and Iowa,
USA), which showed a correlation between the concentration of denitrifers and Pseudomonas spp.

Author Keywords: BTX; aquifer restoration; denitrification; microbial ecology

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:12/01/1996
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 66722