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- Title
Fast degradation of macro alkanes through activating indigenous bacteria using biosurfactants produced by Burkholderia sp.
- Authors
Xu, Jinlan; Cao, Zezhuang; Chen, Feiyang; Li, Yuanyuan; Dai, Jianan; Zhang, Xin
- Abstract
Soil bacteria that produce biosurfactants can use total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPHs) as a carbon source. This study demonstrated that biosurfactants produced by Burkholderia sp. enhanced the recovery and synergism of soil microbial community, resulting in fast degradation of macro alkanes. Experiments were carried out by applying bio-stimulation after pre-oxidation to investigate the effects of nutrient addition on biosurfactant production, TPH degradation, and microbial community succession in the soil. The results presented that bio-stimulation could produce biosurfactants in high C/N (32.6) and C/H (13.3) conversion after pre-oxidation and increased the total removal rate of TPH (10.59–46.71%). The number of total bacteria had a rapid increase trend (2.94–8.50 Log CFU/g soil). The degradation rates of macro alkanes showed a 4.0-fold (48.07 mg/kg·d−1 versus 186.48 mg/kg·d−1) increase, and the bioremediation time of degrading macro alkanes saved 166 days. Further characterization revealed that the biosurfactants produced by Burkholderia sp. could activate indigenous bacteria to degrade macro alkanes rapidly. A shift in phylum from Actinomycetes to Proteobacteria was observed during bioremediation. The average relative abundance of the microbial community increased from 36.24 to 64.96%, and the predominant genus tended to convert from Allorhizobium (8.57%) to Burkholderia (15.95%) and Bacillus (15.70%). The co-occurrence network and Pearson correlation analysis suggested that the synergism of microbial community was the main reason for the fast degradation of macro alkanes in petroleum-contaminated soils. Overall, this study indicated the potential of the biosurfactants to activate and enhance the recovery of indigenous bacteria after pre-oxidation, which was an effective method to remediate petroleum-contaminated soils.
- Subjects
BIOSURFACTANTS; BURKHOLDERIA; ALKANES; PEARSON correlation (Statistics); SOIL microbiology
- Publication
Environmental Science & Pollution Research, 2023, Vol 30, Issue 23, p64300
- ISSN
0944-1344
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11356-023-26909-2