Abstract

The features of the distribution of the concentrations of hydrogen sulfide, methane and the number of sulfite-reducing clostridia in the mud of the Bugazsky, Kiziltashsky and Vityazevsky limans and Chembursky lake were studied, and their physiological and chemical conditions and levels of anthropogenic loading were assessed. The tendency of reduction of the content of the studied reduced gases from the surface to the lower layers of mud was established, with relatively low concentrations of methane in the limans and abnormally high concentrations in the Chembursky lake, subject to strong anthropogenic influence. It is shown that high concentrations of methane and hydrogen sulphide in mud of water bodies that are planned for use for human treatment, indicate good therapeutic properties of peloids. At the same time, for those same reservoirs (limans) that are simultaneously used for extraction and reproduction of hydrobionts, the presence of high concentrations of reduced gases in the upper layers of bottom sediments and near-bottom water layers, as a rule, will promote the development of pestilence phenomena, which will adversely affect the development of the fishing industry. For reservoirs for both fishery and medical purposes, the high content of reduced gases and the abundance of pathogenic microflora may indicate contamination. The established rectilinear relationships between the number of sulfite-reducing clostridia and the concentrations of methane and hydrogen sulfide indicate the participation of sulfite-reducing clostridia in the processes of methane and hydrogen sulfide formation in the mud of the reservoirs of the Taman Peninsula. Sanitary-microbiological assessment of mud of the studied reservoirs shows that the muds studied cannot be recommended for using with medicinal purposes.

Highlights

  • The Taman peninsula is situated in the Azov-Black Sea basin and it is one of the most popular balneological resorts in the South of Russia

  • The simultaneous detection of high concentrations of methane and hydrogen sulfide and clostridium in the upper layers of mud can be a clear indication of the impact of anthropogenic impact on them

  • The analysis of the results of the study of the Kiziltashsky, Bugazsky, Vityazevsky limans and Chembursky Lake made it possible to reveal the tendency of a decrease in the content of reduced gases from the surface to the lower layers of mud, with relatively low concentrations of methane in the limans and abnormally high concentrations in the Chembursky lake, subject to strong anthropogenic influences in the city of Anapa

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Summary

Introduction

The increased content of hydrogen sulphide and/or methane in bottom sediments, which are usually accompanied by a deficiency in dissolved oxygen in water, is fraught with negative consequences both from an ecological and economic point of view, since they can lead to pestilence phenomena and mass death of fish and other hydrobionts. It should be added that the increase in the number of conditionally pathogenic microflora in the bottom sediments, in particular the sulfite-reducing clostridia, may lead to the death of hydrobionts leading the benthic lifestyle (Ivanov, 1988; Fedorov et al, 2005; Morozova and Fedorov, 2015). In many countries, including the Russian Federation, sulfite-reducing clostridia are used as sanitarydemonstration microorganisms in the study of therapeutic mud: the detection of spores of sulfidereducing clostridia indicates a long-standing fecal contamination, and one of the indicators of fresh fecal

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