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      Oil uptake by plant-based sorbents and its biodegradation by their naturally associated microorganisms.

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          Abstract

          The plant waste-products, wheat straw, corn-cobs and sugarcane bagasse took up respectively, 190, 110 and 250% of their own weights crude oil. The same materials harbored respectively, 3.6 × 10(5), 8.5 × 10(3) and 2.3 × 10(6) g(-1) cells of hydrocarbonoclastic microorganisms, as determined by a culture-dependent method. The molecular, culture-independent analysis revealed that the three materials were associated with microbial communities comprising genera known for their hydrocarbonoclastic activity. In bench-scale experiments, inoculating oily media with samples of the individual waste products led to the biodegradation of 34.0-44.9% of the available oil after 8 months. Also plant-product samples, which had been used as oil sorbents lost 24.3-47.7% of their oil via their associated microorganisms, when kept moist for 8 months. In this way, it is easy to see that those waste products are capable of remediating spilled oil physically, and that their associated microbial communities can degrade it biologically.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Environ. Pollut.
          Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
          Elsevier BV
          1873-6424
          0269-7491
          May 08 2017
          : 227
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Microbiology Program, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kuwait University, P.O.Box 5969, Safat 13060, Kuwait.
          [2 ] Microbiology Program, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kuwait University, P.O.Box 5969, Safat 13060, Kuwait. Electronic address: samir.radwan@ku.edu.kw.
          Article
          S0269-7491(16)32880-9
          10.1016/j.envpol.2017.04.089
          28494398
          07c88e6b-705d-4eca-bb7e-d53de93488bf
          History

          Bioremediation,Corn-cobs,Oil sorption,Plant-based sorbents,Sugarcane bagasse,Wheat straw

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