4.6 Article

Zeolite-supported biofilms as inoculants for the treatment of MCPA-polluted soil and sand by bioaugmentation: A microcosm study

Journal

APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY
Volume 180, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2022.104614

Keywords

Biodegradation; Biocomposites; Pesticide contamination; Phenoxy-herbicides; Immobilized bacteria; Carrier materials

Categories

Funding

  1. French Region Centre Val de Loire (APR 2016 BIOPEPS)
  2. BRGM

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study evaluated the effectiveness of using zeolite supported biofilms as inoculants for bioaugmentation. The results showed that the zeolite-supported biofilms were effective in degrading the herbicide MCPA in both soil and sand microcosms. The biocomposites can be used for treating polluted agricultural sites and their activity may vary with the matrix.
In this study, the effectiveness of bioaugmentation approach using zeolite supported biofilms as inoculants was evaluated in microcosm experiments. For this, selected MCPA-degrading microbial consortium was grown as biofilm on natural and Fe-modified zeolite grains (0.2-1.25 mm in size) and the obtained biocomposites (4 x 10(10) cells/g of biocomposite) were amended to soil or sand microcosms (130 g biocomposites/m(2); 4 x 10(7) cells/g of dry weight soil or sand) supplemented with herbicide MCPA (2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid, 0.166 mg/kg dw soil or 0.309 mg/kg of dw sand, respectively). The major part of the identified bacterial sequences (51-59 %) in both biocomposites was attributed to the bacterial genera related to biodegradation of pesticides, including phenoxy-herbicides (Cupriavidus, Novosphingobium, Pseudomonas, Rhodococcus, Sphingobium, Sphingopyxis). The present study showed that the MCPA biodegradation ability of the studied biocomposites was very close to each other and characterised with similar kinetics: biodegradation of 80 % MCPA within 2 days in soil and 5 days in sand. Thus, the zeolite-supported biofilms could be effective inoculants for pesticide biodegradation at polluted agricultural sites. The biocomposites can be effectively used not only for treatment of soil but also sand, however its activity may change with variation of the matrix. Surface modifications of a given support material is an interesting approach to select different microbial communities, which can provide significant advantages according to the site to be treated.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available