Abstract

Environmental degradation due to indiscriminate disposal of refuse has a tremendous effect on microbial activities in the soil. Most soil in Nigeria has been subjected to different kinds of pollutants resulting from anthropogenic activities which have become a major threatening factor to the quality of soil. This study was undertaken to evaluate bacterial diversity and occurrences in cassava effluent contaminated soil from Ozubulu, Anambra State. A total of 30 composite soil samples were aseptically collected from cassava effluent disposal site using a sterile soil auger. The predominant bacterial isolates that aided nutrients cycling were appropriately characterized, and their diversities in both impacted and non-impacted soil samples were enumerated. Furthermore, the bacterial isolates were characterized based on morphology, microscopy, and biochemical characteristics. There was a significant reduction in the occurrences of the bacterial isolates in the impacted soil, and Gram negative rods such as Pseudomonas, Klebsiella and Micrococcus (Gram positive) species were the bacterial isolates. The study has revealed that cassava effluent affects microbial distribution in the soil. Keywords: Bacterial, Diversity, Occurrences, Cassava, Effluent-Contaminated and Soil

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