Abstract

BackgroundThe biotreatability of actual-site polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated soils is often limited by their poor content of autochthonous pollutant-degrading microorganisms. In such cases, inoculation might be the solution for a successful bioremediation. Some pure and mixed cultures of characterized PCB degrading bacteria have been tested to this purpose. However, several failures have been recorded mostly due to the inability of inoculated microbes to compete with autochthonous microflora and to face the toxicity and the scarcity of nutrients occurring in the contaminated biotope. Complex microbial systems, such as compost or sludge, normally consisting of a large variety of robust microorganisms and essential nutrients, would have better chances to succeed in colonizing degraded contaminated soils. However, such sources of microorganisms have been poorly applied in soil bioremediation and in particular in the biotreatment of soil with PCBs. Thus, in this study the effects of Enzyveba, i.e. a consortium of non-adapted microorganisms developed from composted material, on the slurry- and solid-phase aerobic bioremediation of an actual-site, aged PCB-contaminated soil were studied.ResultsA slow and only partial biodegradation of low-chlorinated biphenyls, along with a moderate depletion of initial soil ecotoxicity, were observed in the not-inoculated reactors. Enzyveba significantly increased the availability and the persistence of aerobic PCB- and chlorobenzoic acid-degrading cultivable bacteria in the bioreactors, in particular during the earlier phase of treatment. It also markedly enhanced PCB-biodegradation rate and extent (from 50 to 100%) as well as the final soil detoxification, in particular under slurry-phase conditions. Taken together, data obtained suggest that Enzyveba enhanced the biotreatability of the selected soil by providing exogenous bacteria and fungi able to remove inhibitory or toxic intermediates of PCB biodegradation and/or exogenous nutrients able to sustain microorganisms in charge for PCB mineralization.ConclusionEnzyveba appears a promising agent for bioaugmenting actual-site PCB-polluted soils with a native low content of indigenous specialized microflora. This not only for its positive effects on the soil biotreatability but also for its availability on the market at a relatively low cost.

Highlights

  • The biotreatability of actual-site polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated soils is often limited by their poor content of autochthonous pollutant-degrading microorganisms

  • The effects of a partially characterized consortium of microorganisms developed from the stabilization of high quality organic wastes on the aerobic bioremediation of an actual-site aged PCB-contaminated soil were studied in laboratoryscale slurry and solid-phase bioreactors

  • S3 was markedly contaminated by medium-highly chlorinated PCBs and endowed with a large amount of aerobic heterotrophic bacteria (107 CFU/g of air-dried soil) and with a low concentration of fungi (103 CFU/g of air dried soil)

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Summary

Introduction

The biotreatability of actual-site polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated soils is often limited by their poor content of autochthonous pollutant-degrading microorganisms. Several failures have been recorded mostly due to the inability of inoculated microbes to compete with autochthonous microflora and to face the toxicity and the scarcity of nutrients occurring in the contaminated biotope Complex microbial systems, such as compost or sludge, normally consisting of a large variety of robust microorganisms and essential nutrients, would have better chances to succeed in colonizing degraded contaminated soils. The latter have been ascribed to barrier effects exerted by the soil ecological background (i.e. the diverse natural life forms living in communities within the soils), and to the limited availability of nutrients and/or the occurrence of toxic/ inhibitory compounds in the inoculated biotopes [1416,27] Another approach poorly investigated so far is that of supplementing the contaminated soil with unspecified, naturally established complex consortia of microorganisms, such as those occurring in sludge, manure or compost [28]. To the very best of our knowledge, this is the first work in which a notadapted complex source of microorganisms is applied to bioaugment such a real PCB contaminated soil

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