4.7 Article

Impacts of Arctic diesel contamination on microbial community composition and degradative gene abundance during hydrocarbon biodegradation with and without nutrients: A case study of seven sub-Arctic soils

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 871, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161777

Keywords

Biostimulation; Petroleum hydrocarbons; Microbial community; alkB; Soil organic carbon; Sub-Arctic soils

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This study examined hydrocarbon degradation and microbial activity in seven sub-Arctic soils contaminated with Arctic diesel. The results showed that nutrient amendment promoted hydrocarbon biodegradation and caused significant shifts in microbial diversity and abundance. In addition, the alkane degrading gene alkB was more abundant in systems with nutrient amendment. The extent of microbial community shifts or alkB copy number increases may not be closely correlated with hydrocarbon biodegradation and bioremediation performance across different treatments or soils.
Although a number of studies have assessed hydrocarbon degradation or microbial responses in petroleum contaminated soils, few have examined both and/or assessed impacts in multiple soils simultaneously. In this study petroleum hydrocarbon biodegradation and microbial activity was monitored in seven sub-Arctic soils at similar levels (-3500-4000 mg/kg) of Arctic diesel (DSL), amended with moisture and nutrients (70 mg-N/kg, 78 mg-P/kg), and incubated at site-representative summer temperatures (-7 degrees C) under water unsaturated conditions. Total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) biodegradation extents (42.7-85.4 %) at 50 days were slightly higher in nutrient amended (DSL + N,P) than unamended (DSL) systems in all but one soil. Semi-volatile (C10-C16) hydrocarbons were degraded to a greater extent (40-80 %) than non-volatile (C16-C24) hydrocarbons (20-40 %). However, more significant shifts in microbial diversity and relative abundance of genera belonging to Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria phyla were observed in DSL + N,P than in DSL systems in all soils. Moreover, higher abundance of the alkane degrading gene alkB were observed in DSL + N,P systems than in DSL systems for all soils. The more significant microbial community response in the DSL + N,P systems indicate that addition of nutrients may have influenced the microbial community involved in degradation of carbon sources other than the diesel compounds, such as the soil organic matter or degradation intermediates of diesel compounds. Nocardioides, Arthrobacter, Marmoricola, Pseudomonas, Polaromonas, and Massilia genera were present in high relative abundance in the DSL systems suggesting those genera contained hydrocarbon degraders. Overall, the results suggest that the extents of microbial community shifts or alkB copy number increases may not be closely correlated to the increase in hydrocarbon biodegradation and thus bioremediation performance between various treatments or across different soils.

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