Can microbial mineralization be used to estimate microbial availability of organic contaminants in soil?
The aim of this study was to characterize the behaviour of a PAH-degrading bacterium to determine whether mineralization plateaus as a result of substrate removal, a decrease in microbial activity or nutrient availability in sterile soils over time. To investigate this, the mineralization of 14C-phe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental pollution (1987) 2006-03, Vol.140 (1), p.164-172 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The aim of this study was to characterize the behaviour of a PAH-degrading bacterium to determine whether mineralization plateaus as a result of substrate removal, a decrease in microbial activity or nutrient availability in sterile soils over time. To investigate this, the mineralization of
14C-phenanthrene was measured until it plateaued; subsequently, additional
14C-phenanthrene, catabolic inocula or nutrients were introduced and mineralization was measured for a further 10
d. Cell numbers were also measured together with
14C-uptake into microbial biomass. Freshly added
14C-phenanthrene was rapidly metabolised by the microorganisms. Neither the addition of a catabolic inoculum nor nutrients affected the extent of
14C-phenanthrene mineralization. Cell numbers remained constant over time, with only a small amount of the
14C-activity incorporated into the microbial biomass. This study indicated that the termination of mineralization was due to the removal of available phenanthrene and not decreasing cellular activity or cell death. The mineralization values also correlated with
14C-phenanthrene extractability using β-cyclodextrin.
Mineralization can estimate the microbial availability of
14C-contaminants in soil. |
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ISSN: | 0269-7491 1873-6424 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envpol.2005.06.009 |