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Effects of Dispersants and Biosurfactants on Crude-Oil Biodegradation and Bacterial Community Succession

Gareth E. Thomas, Jan L. Brant, Pablo Campo, Dave R. Clark, Frédéric Coulon, Benjamin H. Gregson, Terry J. McGenity, Boyd A. McKew

2021Microorganisms45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study evaluated the effects of three commercial dispersants (Finasol OSR 52, Slickgone NS, Superdispersant 25) and three biosurfactants (rhamnolipid, trehalolipid, sophorolipid) in crude-oil seawater microcosms. We analysed the crucial early bacterial response (1 and 3 days). In contrast, most analyses miss this key period and instead focus on later time points after oil and dispersant addition. By focusing on the early stage, we show that dispersants and biosurfactants, which reduce the interfacial surface tension of oil and water, significantly increase the abundance of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, and the rate of hydrocarbon biodegradation, within 24 h. A succession of obligate hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria (OHCB), driven by metabolite niche partitioning, is demonstrated. Importantly, this succession has revealed how the OHCB Oleispira, hitherto considered to be a psychrophile, can dominate in the early stages of oil-spill response (1 and 3 days), outcompeting all other OHCB, at the relatively high temperature of 16 °C. Additionally, we demonstrate how some dispersants or biosurfactants can select for specific bacterial genera, especially the biosurfactant rhamnolipid, which appears to provide an advantageous compatibility with Pseudomonas, a genus in which some species synthesize rhamnolipid in the presence of hydrocarbons.

Topics & Concepts

RhamnolipidDispersantMicrocosmBiodegradationHydrocarbonBacteriaPetroleumPseudomonasEnvironmental chemistryBiologyChemistryEcologyOrganic chemistryPseudomonas aeruginosaDispersion (optics)OpticsPhysicsGeneticsMicrobial bioremediation and biosurfactantsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyOil Spill Detection and Mitigation
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