Abstract

Abstract Three bacterial strains, Bacillus sp. SV9, Acinetobacter sp. SV4 and Pseudomonas sp., SV17 from contaminated soil in Ankleshwar, India were tested for their ability to degrade the complex mixture of petroleum hydrocarbons (such as alkanes, aromatics, resins and asphaltenes), sediments, heavy metals and water known as oily sludge. Gravimetric analysis showed that Bacillus sp. SV9 degraded approx. 59% of the oily sludge in 5 days at 30 °C whereas Acinetobacter sp. SV4 and Pseudomonas sp. SV17 degraded 37% and 35%. Capillary gas chromatographic analysis revealed that after 5 days the Bacillus strain was able to degrade oily sludge components of chain length C 12 –C 30 and aromatics more effectively than the other two strains. Maximum drop in surface tension (from 70 to 28.4 mN/m) was accompanied by maximum biosurfactant production (6.7 g l −1 ) in Bacillus sp. SV9 after 72 h, these results collectively indicating that this bacterial strain has considerable potential for bioremediation of oily sludge.

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