Soil phenanthrene phytoremediation capacity in bacteria-assisted Spartina densiflora

J Mesa-Marín, JM Barcia-Piedras… - Ecotoxicology and …, 2019 - Elsevier
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 2019Elsevier
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) have become a threat for the conservation of
wetlands worldwide. The halophyte Spartina densiflora has shown to be potentially useful
for soil phenanthrene phytoremediation, but no studies on bacteria-assisted hydrocarbon
phytoremediation have been carried out with this halophyte. In this work, three
phenanthrene-degrading endophytic bacteria were isolated from S. densiflora tissues and
used for plant inoculation. Bacterial bioaugmentation treatments slightly improved S …
Abstract
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) have become a threat for the conservation of wetlands worldwide. The halophyte Spartina densiflora has shown to be potentially useful for soil phenanthrene phytoremediation, but no studies on bacteria-assisted hydrocarbon phytoremediation have been carried out with this halophyte. In this work, three phenanthrene-degrading endophytic bacteria were isolated from S. densiflora tissues and used for plant inoculation. Bacterial bioaugmentation treatments slightly improved S. densiflora growth, photosynthetic and fluorescence parameters. But endophyte-inoculated S. densiflora showed lower soil phenanthrene dissipation rates than non-inoculated S. densiflora (30% below) or even bulk soil (23% less). Our work demonstrates that endophytic inoculation on S. densiflora under greenhouse conditions with the selected PAH-degrading strains did not significantly increase inherent phenanthrene soil dissipation capacity of the halophyte. It would therefore be advisable to provide effective follow-up of bacterial colonization, survival and metabolic activity during phenanthrene soil phytoremediation.
Elsevier
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