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Alarcon, A; Davies, FT; Autenrieth, RL; Zuberer, DA. 2008. Arbuscular mycorrhiza and petroleum-degrading microorganisms enhance phytoremediation of petroleum-contaminated soil. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHYTOREMEDIATION. 10(4):251-263.
Address:
Davies, FT, Texas A&M Univ, Dept Hort Sci, Fac Mol & Environm Plant
Sci, College Stn, TX 77843
While plants can phytoremediate soils that are contaminated with
petroleum hydrocarbons, adding microbes to remediate contaminated sites
with petroleum-degrading microorganisms and arbuscular mycorrhizal
fungi (AMF) is not well understood. The phytoremediation of Arabian
medium crude oil (ACO) was done with a Lolium multiflorum system
inoculated with an AMF (Glomus intraradices) and a mixture of
petroleum-degrading microorganismsthe bacterium, Sphingomonas
paucimobilis (Sp) and the filamentous fungus, Cunninghamella echinulata
(Ce, SpCe)or with a combination of microorganisms (AMF + SpCe). Based
on an earlier study on screening plants for phytoremediation of ACO, L.
multiflorum (Italian ryegrass) was selected for its tolerance and rapid
growth response (Alarcon, 2006). The plants were exposed to
ACO-contaminated soil (6000 mg kg-1) for 80 d under greenhouse
conditions. A modified Long Ashton Nutrient Solution (LANS) was
supplied to all treatments at 30 g P mL(-1), except for a second,
higher P, control treatment at 44 g P mL(-1). Inoculation with AMF,
SpCe, or AMF + SpCe resulted in significantly increased leaf area as
well as leaf and pseudostem dry mass as compared to controls at 30 g P
mL-1. Populations of bacteria grown on a nitrogen-free medium and
filamentous fungi increased with AMF + SpCe and SpCe treatments. The
average total colonization and arbuscule formation of AMF-inoculated
plants in ACO-contaminated soil were 25% and 8%, respectively. No
adverse effects were caused by SpCe on AMFcolonization. Most
importantly, ACOdegradation was significantly enhanced by the addition
of petroleum-degrading microorganisms and higher fertility controls, as
compared to plants at 30 g P mL(-1). The highest ACOdegradation (59%)
was observed with AMF + SpCe. The phytoremediation of ACO was also
enhanced by single inoculation of AMF or SpCe. The effect of AMF and
petroleum-degrading microorganisms on plant growth and ACOdegradation
was not attributable to differences in proline, total phenolics,
nitrate reductase levels, or variation in plant-gas exchange.
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