4.6 Article

Effectiveness of Permeable Reactive Bio-Barriers for Bioremediation of an Organohalide-Polluted Aquifer by Natural-Occurring Microbial Community

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13172442

Keywords

microbial bioremediation; organohalide respiration; permeable reactive bio-barrier; microcosms; reductive dehalogenases; Chloroflexi

Funding

  1. INAIL-BRIC 2019 [ID52]
  2. University of Milano-PhD School of Food Systems

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The study evaluated a bioremediation approach for decontaminating an aquifer affected by organohalides from an industrial landfill. Results showed that the addition of a reducing substrate could stimulate natural organohalide respiration, leading to degradation of the contaminants. Field tests demonstrated a decrease in chloroethenes concentration, suggesting the potential for further improvement of the approach.
In this study, a bioremediation approach was evaluated for the decontamination of an aquifer affected by the release of organohalides by an industrial landfill. After preliminary physicochemical and microbiological characterization of the landfill groundwater, the stimulation of natural organohalide respiration by the addition of a reducing substrate (i.e., molasse) was tested both at microcosm and at field scales, by the placement of an anaerobic permeable reactive bio-barrier. Illumina sequencing of cDNA 16S rRNA gene revealed that organohalide-respiring bacteria of genera Geobacter, Sulfurospirillum, Dehalococcoides, Clostridium and Shewanella were present within the aquifer microbial community, along with fermentative Firmicutes and Parvarchaeota. Microcosm experiments confirmed the presence of an active natural attenuation, which was boosted by the addition of the reducing substrate. Field tests showed that the bio-barrier decreased the concentration of chloroethenes at a rate of 23.74 kg d(-1). Monitoring of organohalide respiration biomarkers by qPCR and Illumina sequencing revealed that native microbial populations were involved in the dechlorination process, although their specific role still needs to be clarified. The accumulation of lower-chloroethenes suggested the need of future improvement of the present approach by supporting bacterial vinyl-chloride oxidation, to achieve a complete degradation of chloroethenes.

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