4.6 Article

Natural Surface Hydrocarbons and Soil Faunal Biodiversity: A Bioremediation Perspective

Journal

WATER
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w12092358

Keywords

soil arthropods; soil microfauna; bioremediation; bioindicators; natural oil seepages

Funding

  1. Departments of Excellence program of the Italian Ministry for Education, University and Research (MIUR, 2018-2022)

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Hydrocarbon pollution threatens aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems globally, but soil fauna in oil-polluted soils has been insufficiently studied. In this research, soil hydrocarbon toxicity was investigated in two natural oil seepage soils in Val D'Agri (Italy) using two different approaches: (i) toxicological tests withFolsomia candida(Collembola) andEisenia fetida(Oligochaeta) and (ii) analysis of abundance and composition of micro- and meso-fauna. Soil sampling was done along 20 m-transepts starting from the natural oil seepages. Toxicological testing revealed that no exemplars ofF. candidasurvived, whereas specimens ofE. fetidanot only survived but also increased in weight in soils with higher PAH concentrations, although no reproduction was observed. Analysis on microfauna showed that Nematoda was the most abundant group, with distance from seepages not affecting its abundance. Arthropoda results showed that Acarina, Collembola and Diptera larvae represented the most abundant taxa. The highest divergence in community composition was found between soils situated near seepages and at 5 m and 10 m distance. Arthropoda taxa numbers, total abundance and Acarina were lower in soils with high PAH concentration, while Diptera larvae were not significantly affected. Earthworms, together with Nematoda and Diptera larvae, could therefore represent ideal candidates in PAH degradation studies.

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