Abstract

Availability of inorganic nutrients, particularly nitrogen and phosphorous, is often a primary control on crude oil hydrocarbon degradation in marine systems. Many studies have empirically determined optimum levels of inorganic N and P for stimulation of hydrocarbon degradation. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of information on fundamental kinetic parameters for nutrient enhanced crude oil biodegradation that can be used to model the fate of crude oil in bioremediation programmes that use inorganic nutrient addition to stimulate oil biodegradation. Here we report fundamental kinetic parameters (Ks and qmax) for nitrate- and phosphate-stimulated crude oil biodegradation under nutrient limited conditions and with respect to crude oil, under conditions where N and P are not limiting. In the marine sediments studied, crude oil degradation was limited by both N and P availability. In sediments treated with 12.5 mg/g of oil but with no addition of N and P, hydrocarbon degradation rates, assessed on the basis of CO2 production, were 1.10 ± 0.03 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day which were comparable to rates of CO2 production in sediments to which no oil was added (1.05 ± 0.27 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day). When inorganic nitrogen was added alone maximum rates of CO2 production measured were 4.25 ± 0.91 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. However, when the same levels of inorganic nitrogen were added in the presence of 0.5% P w/w of oil (1.6 μmol P/g wet sediment) maximum rates of measured CO2 production increased more than four-fold to 18.40 ± 1.04 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. Ks and qmax estimates for inorganic N (in the form of sodium nitrate) when P was not limiting were 1.99 ± 0.86 μmol/g wet sediment and 16.16 ± 1.28 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day respectively. The corresponding values for P were 63 ± 95 nmol/g wet sediment and 12.05 ± 1.31 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. The qmax values with respect to N and P were not significantly different (P < 0.05). When N and P were not limiting Ks and qmax for crude oil were 4.52 ± 1.51 mg oil/g wet sediment and 16.89 ± 1.25 μmol CO2/g wet sediment/day. At concentrations of inorganic N above 45 μmol/g wet sediment inhibition of CO2 production from hydrocarbon degradation was evident. Analysis of bacterial 16S rRNA genes indicated that Alcanivorax spp. were selected in these marine sediments with increasing inorganic nutrient concentration, whereas Cycloclasticus spp. were more prevalent at lower inorganic nutrient concentrations. These data suggest that simple empirical estimates of the proportion of nutrients added relative to crude oil concentrations may not be sufficient to guarantee successful crude oil bioremediation in oxic beach sediments. The data we present also help define the maximum rates and hence timescales required for bioremediation of beach sediments.

Highlights

  • Natural hydrocarbon seeps are quantitatively the largest source of petroleum in marine systems, anthropogenic activities involved in the production transport and use of crude oil and oil products remain important sources of oil pollution (National Research Council, 2003)

  • Without P treatment, measured oil degrading activity reached a maximum level at 4% N w/w of oil (4.25 ± 0.91 μmol CO2produced/g wet sediment/day) and at levels of N of 0.5% w/w of oil and above there was no significant difference in the rate of crude oil biodegradation (ANOVA; P = 0.750; Figure 1)

  • Our results confirm that crude oil biodegradation in marine beach sediments is sensitive to the level of inorganic N and P nutrient treatments but that the maximum rates of crude oil biodegradation achievable are approximately 16 μmol C/g sediment/day at the incubation temperature of our experiments (24◦C)

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Summary

Introduction

Natural hydrocarbon seeps are quantitatively the largest source of petroleum in marine systems, anthropogenic activities involved in the production transport and use of crude oil and oil products remain important sources of oil pollution (National Research Council, 2003). In terms of volume this corresponds to a 93% decrease and, excluding the Deepwater Horizon blowout, the total quantity of oil spilt during 2010–2011 (13,000 tonnes from 13 recorded spills) was the lowest so far recorded (ITOPF, 2011). Such statistics indicate that oil spills are generally declining, major www.frontiersin.org. Kinetic parameters for crude oil biodegradation accidents like the Deepwater Horizon blowout on 20th April 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico are a stark reminder that accidental oil spills remain an important environment hazard. Concentrations of total petroleum hydrocarbon as high as 510 mg g−1 sediment were recorded in the surface 2 cm of heavily polluted marsh sediments even 7 months after the spill (Lin and Mendelssohn, 2012)

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