Abstract

This paper reports the third in a series of three studies of a unique aquatic phytobial consortium that developed in a polluted ditch situated near an old chromium waste landfill. The ditch is a specific ecological niche having increased loads of several chemical compounds, including extreme hexavalent chromium concentrations up to two thousand times the allowed limit (0.02 mg dm−3 in Poland) in the more polluted section B; the moderate concentrations in section A are twice the limit. We focus on the microscopic algae group of diatoms, one of the most important components of the phytobial consortium, and continue our novel attempt to analyze the bioremediation potential of the entire consortium under those environmental conditions. We used numerical methods to analyze differences in diatom biodiversity between sections A and B, and assessed the relations between diatoms and selected water chemistry properties, including hexavalent chromium, chlorides and sulphates, the latter two known to positively influence the resistance of algae to the impact of hexavalent chromium. We noted 37 diatom taxa in section A of the ditch and 30 in section B. The most frequently observed diatoms were cosmopolitan taxa and/or characteristic taxa of saline waters. Sulphates were the most important factor influencing the diatom composition in the ditch, explaining 52% of the total variability, followed by chlorides (30%) and hexavalent chromium (9%). Gomphonema acuminatum, Melosira varians and Nitzschia frustulum var. frustulum were found to be most resistant to hexavalent chromium and were selected for further experimental studies on their biotechnological usefulness.

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