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Exploiting the intrinsic microbial degradative potential for field-based in situ dechlorination of trichloroethene contaminated groundwater

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:39 authored by Eric Adetutu, Taylor Gundry, Sayali Patil, Aida Golneshin, Joy Adigun, Vijay Bhaskarla, Samuel Aleer, Esmaeil Shahsavari, Elizabeth Ross, Andrew BallAndrew Ball
Bioremediation of trichloroethene (TCE) polluted groundwater is challenging, with limited next generation sequencing (NGS) derived information available on microbial community dynamics associated with dechlorination. Understanding these dynamics is important for designing and improving TCE bioremediation. In this study, biostimulation (BS), biostimulation-bioaugmentation (BS-BA) and monitored natural attenuation (MNA) approaches were applied to contaminated groundwater wells resulted in ≥95% dechlorination within 7 months. Vinyl chloride's final concentrations in stimulated wells were between 1.84 and 1.87μgL-1, below the US EPA limit of 2.0μgL-1, compared to MNA (4.3μgL-1). Assessment of the groundwater microbial community with qPCR showed up to ~50-fold increase in the classical dechlorinators' (Geobacter and Dehalococcoides sp.) population post-treatment. Metagenomic assays revealed shifts from Gammaproteobacteria (pre-treatment) to Epsilonproteobacteria and Deltaproteobacteria (post-treatment) only in stimulated wells. Although stimulated wells were functionally distinct from MNA wells post-treatment, substantial dechlorination in all the wells implied some measure of redundancy. This study, one of the few NGS-based field studies on TCE bioremediation, provides greater insights into dechlorinating microbial community dynamics which should be useful for future field-based studies.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2015.06.055
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 03043894

Journal

Journal of Hazardous Materials

Volume

300

Start page

48

End page

57

Total pages

10

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Elsevier B.V.

Former Identifier

2006054291

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-10-20

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