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Soil Characteristics Constrain the Response of Microbial Communities and Associated Hydrocarbon Degradation Genes during Phytoremediation

Sara Correa‐García, Karelle Rheault, Julien Tremblay, Armand Séguin, Étienne Yergeau

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) are a group of organic contaminants that pose a risk to ecosystems' health. Phytoremediation is a promising biotechnology with the potential to restore PAH-contaminated soils. However, some limitations prevent it from becoming the remediation technology of reference, despite being environmentally friendlier than mainstream physicochemical alternatives. Recent reports suggest that the original soil microbial diversity is the key to harnessing the potential of phytoremediation. Therefore, this study focused on determining the effect of two different soil types in the fate of phenanthrene (a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon) under balsam poplar remediation. Poplar increased the degradation of phenanthrene in forest, but not in agricultural soil. The fungi were affected by poplars, whereas total bacteria and specific PAH-degrading bacteria were constrained by soil type, leading to different degradation patterns between soils. These results highlight the importance of performing preliminary microbiological studies of contaminated soils to determine whether plant presence could improve remediation rates or not.

Topics & Concepts

PhytoremediationEnvironmental remediationPhenanthreneBioremediationEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental scienceSoil contaminationSoil waterMicrobial biodegradationPolycyclic aromatic hydrocarbonBiodegradationMicrobial population biologyBioaugmentationSoil microbiologyMicroorganismContaminationChemistryBiologyBacteriaEcologySoil scienceGeneticsMicrobial bioremediation and biosurfactantsToxic Organic Pollutants ImpactMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction
Soil Characteristics Constrain the Response of Microbial Communities and Associated Hydrocarbon Degradation Genes during Phytoremediation | Litcius