首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Effects of Nutrient Source and Supply on Crude Oil Biodegradation in Continuous-Flow Beach Microcosms
Authors:Brian A Wrenn  Kathryn L Sarnecki  Eugene S Kohar  Kenneth Lee  Albert D Venosa
Affiliation:1Civil Engineering Dept., Washington Univ., Environmental Engineering Science Program, Campus Box 1180, One Brookings Dr., St. Louis, MO 63130 (corresponding author). E-mail: bawrenn@seas.wustl.edu
2Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Univ. of Illinois, 205 N. Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801.
3PT Trias Sentosa, Desa Keboharan Km 26 Krian, Sidoarjo, Indonesia.
4Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada, Center for Offshore Oil and Gas Environmental Research, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, NS, Canada B2Y 4A2.
5National Risk Management Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 26 W. Martin Luther King Dr., Cincinnati, OH 45268.
Abstract:Ammonium and nitrate were used as nitrogen sources to support microbial biodegradation of crude oil in continuous-flow beach microcosms to determine whether either nutrient was more effective in open systems, such as intertidal shorelines. No differences in the rate or extent of oil biodegradation were observed, regardless of whether these nutrients were provided continuously or intermittently. Nutrients were provided once every two weeks to intermittent-input microcosms and washed out within four to five days. In continuous-input microcosms, ammonium and nitrate were assimilated as quickly as they were provided during the first week, but both accumulated to greater than 10?mg?N/L thereafter. The sensitivity of the oil mineralization rate to nutrient input decreased rapidly as the extent of oil degradation increased, and after about two weeks the rate of oil-mineralization appeared to be independent of nutrient input. Therefore, there may be little value in maintaining a long-term supply of nutrients in contact with oil-contaminated sediments. The rates of microbial assimilation of ammonium and nitrate followed similar trends. Both compounds were assimilated more slowly as the extent of oil biodegradation increased, and the nitrate uptake rates approached zero after about two weeks. Ammonium assimilation continued at a low rate throughout the six-week experiment, but this did not appear to affect the rate of oil mineralization. Assimilation of ammonium resulted in a sharp decrease in the pH of the synthetic seawater that was pumped continuously through the microcosms, but nitrate had a much smaller effect on pH. The magnitude of the ammonium-associated pH change was never as large as was observed in previous studies involving oil biodegradation in batch reactors, however, and did not affect the oil-biodegradation rate.
Keywords:Crude oil  Biodegradation  Oil spills  Nutrients  Kinetics  Shore protection  
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号