1,4-Dioxane biodegradation at low temperatures in Arctic groundwater samples

Li, M; Fiorenza, S; Chatham, JR; Mahendra, S; Alvarez, PJJ

HERO ID

2128123

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

20199795

HERO ID 2128123
In Press No
Year 2010
Title 1,4-Dioxane biodegradation at low temperatures in Arctic groundwater samples
Authors Li, M; Fiorenza, S; Chatham, JR; Mahendra, S; Alvarez, PJJ
Journal Water Research
Volume 44
Issue 9
Page Numbers 2894-2900
Abstract 1,4-Dioxane biodegradation was investigated in microcosms prepared with groundwater and soil from an impacted site in Alaska. In addition to natural attenuation conditions (i.e., no amendments), the following treatments were tested: (a) biostimulation by addition of 1-butanol (a readily available auxiliary substrate) and inorganic nutrients; and (b) bioaugmentation with Pseudonocardia dioxanivorans CB1190, a well-characterized dioxane-degrading bacterium, or with Pseudonocardia antarctica DVS 5a1, a bacterium isolated from Antarctica. Biostimulation enhanced the degradation of 50 mg L(-1) dioxane by indigenous microorganisms (about 0.01 mg dioxane d(-1) mg protein(-1)) at both 4 and 14 degrees C, with a simultaneous increase in biomass. A more pronounced enhancement was observed through bioaugmentation. Microcosms with 50 mg L(-1) initial dioxane (representing source-zone contamination) and augmented with CB1190 degraded dioxane fastest (0.16 +/- 0.04 mg dioxane d(-1) mg protein(-1)) at 14 degrees C, and the degradation rate decreased dramatically at 4 degrees C (0.021 +/- 0.007 mg dioxane d(-1) mg protein(-1)). In contrast, microcosms with DVS 5a1 degraded dioxane at similar rates at 4 degrees C and 14 degrees C (0.018 +/- 0.004 and 0.015 +/- 0.006 mg dioxane d(-1) mg protein(-1), respectively). DVS 5a1 outperformed CB1190 when the initial dioxane concentration was low (500 microg L(-1), which is representative of the leading edge of plumes). This indicates differences in competitive advantages of these two strains. Natural attenuation microcosms also showed significant degradation over 6 months when the initial dioxane concentration was 500 microg L(-1). This is the first study to report the potential for dioxane bioremediation and natural attenuation of contaminated groundwater in sensitive cold-weather ecosystems such as the Arctic.
Doi 10.1016/j.watres.2010.02.007
Pmid 20199795
Wosid WOS:000277882000021
Url https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/1-4-dioxane-biodegradation-at-low-temperatures/docview/746151441/se-2
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Journal: ISSN:
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Alaska; Dioxane; Natural attenuation; Bioremediation; Bioaugmentation; Pseudonocardia; CB1190; DVS 5a1