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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Sep 1997, 3589-3593, Vol 63, No. 9
JD Coates, J Woodward, J Allen, P Philp and DR Lovley
Although polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have usually been found to
persist under strict anaerobic conditions, in a previous study an unusual
site was found in San Diego Bay in which two PAHs, naphthalene and
phenanthrene, were oxidized to carbon dioxide under sulfate-reducing
conditions. Further investigations with these sediments revealed that
methylnaphthalene, fluorene, and fluoranthene were also anaerobically
oxidized to carbon dioxide in these sediments, while pyrene and
benzo[a]pyrene were not. Studies with naphthalene indicated that PAH
oxidation was sulfate dependent. Incubating the sediments with additional
naphthalene for 1 month resulted in a significant increase in the oxidation
of [14C]naphthalene. In sediments from a less heavily contaminated site in
San diego Bay where PAHs were not readily degraded, naphthalene degradation
could be stimulated through inoculation with active PAH-degrading sediments
from the most heavily contaminated site. Sediments from the less heavily
contaminated site that had been adapted for rapid anaerobic degradation of
high concentrations of benzene did not oxidize naphthalene, suggesting that
the benzene- and naphthalene-degrading populations were different. When
fuels containing complex mixtures of alkanes were added to sediments from
the two sites, there was significant degradation in the alkanes.
[14C]hexadecane was also anaerobically oxidized to 14CO2 in these
sediments. Molybdate, a specific inhibitor of sulfate reduction, inhibited
hexadecane oxidation. These results demonstrate that a wide variety of
hydrocarbon contaminants can be degraded under sulfate- reducing conditions
in hydrocarbon-contaminated sediments, and they suggest that it may be
possible to use sulfate reduction rather than aerobic respiration as a
treatment strategy for hydrocarbon- contaminated dredged sediments.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Anaerobic degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and alkanes in petroleum-contaminated marine harbor sediments
Department of Microbiology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 62901, USA.
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