Published 2004
| Version v1
Publication
Response of the bacterial community to in-situ bioremediation of organic-rich sediments
Creators
Contributors
Description
A field trial experiment was carried out to assess the potential of bioremediation for mobilisation of carbon in organic-rich
sediments. Both bioaugmentation (bio-fixed microorganisms) and biostimulation (oxygen release compounds––ORC) protocols
have been tested and the response of the bacterial community has been described to assess the baseline for bioremediation potential.
Multifactorial ANOVA revealed that bioaugmentation protocol had an effect in stimulate mobilisation processes and significantly
enhanced extra-cellular enzymatic activity rates. In contrast biostimulation treatment did not have an effect on mobilisation rates
but contributed to enhance bacterial efficiency through a maximization of the bacterial production:enzymatic activity ratio. Average
calculation of net mobilised carbon showed that 23% increase of mobilised pool was accounted for bioaugmentation in summer.
Although biostimulation accounted for a smaller increase in mobilised carbon (<10%), the use of ORC resulted in an increased
mineralisation and net carbon loss via respiration. Based on our results, a conceptual model for application of bioremediation to
face the problem of sediment eutrophication is discussed.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/249505
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/249505
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE