4.5 Article

Macrophyte and indigenous bacterial co-remediation process for pentachlorophenol removal from wastewater

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHYTOREMEDIATION
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 271-282

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15226514.2021.1933897

Keywords

Bioaugmentation; pentachlorophenol; phytoremediation

Funding

  1. Tunisian Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrated the efficiency of bioaugmentation-phytoremediation using Typha angustifolia in removing PCP from wastewater. Significant PCP removal by indigenous bacteria and a decrease in chloride content were observed, along with an increase in bacterial numbers. Novel methods and analyses were employed to evaluate the phytoremediation process, showing positive effects on intrinsic microorganisms and promoting pollutant remediation.
This study has contributed in the description of bioaugmentation-phytoremediation efficiency process using Typha angustifolia concerning PCP tolerance and removal from wastewater. Samples of wastewater were collected from industrial wastewater plants, namely row wastewater effluent E.WW, primary wastewater P.WW, secondary wastewater S.WW, clarified wastewater AC.WW. These effluents were spiked with PCP at different rate (100, 500, and 1000 mg.L-1), physical, chemical and biological properties were monitored. A second experiment was set up in order to check the efficiency of phytoremediation treatments of the different effluents artificially contaminated with 200 mg.L-1 PCP after 20 days lab scale experiment. An important PCP removal by indigenous bacteria was showed in S. WW with values from 1000 to 72.2 mg.L-1 from T0 (start of the experiment) to TF (end of the experiment), respectively. Phytoremediation process allowed a decrease of PCP rate from 200 to 6.4 mg.L-1, a decrease of chloride content from 14.0 to 4.0 mg.L-1 in S.WW samples was observed. Furthermore, a significant increase of bacterial number in S.WW and AC.WW to 1.700 x 10(6) and 1.450 x 10(6) CFU.mL(-1), respectively was observed. In addition, the DGGE analysis showed that after bioaugmentation-phytoremediation treatments, the highest species richness and relative abundance in wastewater effluent was observed. Novelty statement Pentachlorophenol (PCP) is one of highly toxic of polychlorophenols and required to continuously monitor in environment. This paper presenting a sensitive method phytoremediation and bioaugmentation for PCP biotransformation in wastewater. The novelty is the choice of a macrophyte Typha angustifolia, which is still used for the elimination of heavy metals but it not used for pesticide and pollutant removal in wastewater. Also, there are different analysis that was performed in order to check phyto-technique process (DGGE and HPLC). On the other side, in this study, the phyto-techniques with Typha angustifolia positively affected intrinsic microorganisms in order to promote pollutant remediation. So, the intrinsic microorganisms in wastewater with the macrophyte presence have a great capacity to reduce this pollutant and improve the bioremediation process.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available