Bacterial degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in surface sediments of coastal ecosystems

Montgomery, MT; Osburn, CL; Boyd, TJ; Reatherford, S; Smith, DC

HERO ID

8100675

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2002

Language

English

HERO ID 8100675
In Press No
Year 2002
Title Bacterial degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in surface sediments of coastal ecosystems
Authors Montgomery, MT; Osburn, CL; Boyd, TJ; Reatherford, S; Smith, DC
Journal Journal of Soil Contamination
Volume 11
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1021
Abstract Petroleum-derived compounds can accumulate in surface sediments and change the associated biota. Thus, the effect of various chemical and physical conditions on bacterial production and aromatic hydrocarbon mineralization in surface sediments of five coastal ecosystems that have significant anthropogenic impacts was studied. Sediment from temperate coastal systems had large seasonal variation in mineralization rates and turnover times of sentinel aromatic hydrocarbons (i.e., naphthalene, phenanthrene, and fluoranthene, although there was little correlation with temperature. Aromatic hydrocarbon mineralization, as measured using 14C-radiotracer additions, was dramatically reduced when bottom water dissolved oxygen saturation was below 70%. Ambient hydrocarbon concentration below 10 μg/g sediment did not support bacterial assemblages capable of rapid mineralization of the hydrocarbons. In many ecosystems, high PAH concentration correlated with low bacterial production, although this was not seen in Pearl Harbor. In this tropical ecosystem, production generally increased with PAH concentration, as did PAH mineralization.
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Is Public Yes
Language Text English