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      Novel diesel-oil-degrading bacteria and fungi from the Ecuadorian Amazon rainforest

      1 , 2 , 3
      Water Science and Technology
      IWA Publishing

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          Abstract

          Isolating new diesel-oil-degrading microorganisms from crude-oil contaminated sites and evaluating their degradation capacities are vitally important in the remediation of oil-polluted environments and crude-oil exploitation. In this research, new hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria and fungi were isolated from the crude-oil contaminated soil of the oil-fields in the Amazon rainforest of north-east Ecuador by using a soil enrichment technique. Degradation analysis was tracked by gas chromatography and a flame ionization detector. Under laboratory conditions, maximum degradability of the total n-alkanes reached up to 77.34 and 62.62 removal ratios after 30 days of incubation for the evaporated diesel oil by fungi (isolate-1) and bacteria (isolate-1), respectively. The 16S/18S rDNA sequence analysis indicated that the microorganisms were most closely (99–100%) related to Bacillus cereus (isolate-1), Bacillus thuringiensis (isolate-2), Geomyces pannorum (isolate-1), and Geomyces sp. (isolate-2). Therefore, these strains enable the degradation of hydrocarbons as the sole carbon source, and these findings will benefit these strains in the remediation of oil-polluted environments and oil exploitation.

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          Rapid extraction of fungal DNA for PCR amplification.

          J L Cenis (1992)
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            Bioremediation of marine oil spills: when and when not – the Exxon Valdez experience

            Summary In this article we consider what we have learned from the Exxon Valdez oil spill (EVOS) in terms of when bioremediation should be considered and what it can accomplish. We present data on the state of oiling of Prince William Sound shorelines 18 years after the spill, including the concentration and composition of subsurface oil residues (SSOR) sampled by systematic shoreline surveys conducted between 2002 and 2007. Over this period, 346 sediment samples were analysed by GC‐MS and extents of hydrocarbon depletion were quantified. In 2007 alone, 744 sediment samples were collected and extracted, and 222 were analysed. Most sediment samples from sites that were heavily oiled by the spill and physically cleaned and bioremediated between 1989 and 1991 show no remaining SSOR. Where SSOR does remain, it is for the most part highly weathered, with 82% of 2007 samples indicating depletion of total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (Total PAH) of > 70% relative to EVOS oil. This SSOR is sequestered in patchy deposits under boulder/cobble armour, generally in the mid‐to‐upper intertidal zone. The relatively high nutrient concentrations measured at these sites, the patchy distribution and the weathering state of the SSOR suggest that it is in a form and location where bioremediation likely would be ineffective at increasing the rate of hydrocarbon removal.
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              Bioremediation of petroleum hydrocarbon-contaminated soil by composting in biopiles

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Water Science and Technology
                IWA Publishing
                0273-1223
                1996-9732
                May 01 2015
                March 28 2015
                May 01 2015
                May 01 2015
                March 28 2015
                May 01 2015
                : 71
                : 10
                : 1554-1561
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Faculty of Environmental Engineering, Universidad Estatal Amazónica, Puyo, Ecuador
                [2 ]Department of Life Sciences, Universidad de las Fuerzas Armadas, ESPE, Quito, Ecuador
                [3 ]Instituto de Biotecnología de las Plantas (IBP), Universidad Central Marta Abreu de Las Villas, Santa Clara, Cuba
                Article
                10.2166/wst.2015.142
                26442498
                9a3847c5-be9d-4f7a-aa06-4aa9850b2652
                © 2015
                History

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