Microbial community evolution during the aerobic biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons in marine sediment microcosms: Effect of biostimulation and seasonal variations

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Elsevier Ltd

Abstract

Evolution of the microbial community structure in crude oil contaminated marine sediments was assessed under aerobic biodegradation during wet (18 °C) and dry (28 °C) seasons experiments, to account for seasonal variations in nutrients and temperature, under biostimulation and natural attenuation conditions. NMDS showed significant variation in the microbial communities between the wet and the dry season experiments, and between the biostimulation and the natural attenuation treatments in the dry season microcosms. No significant variation in the microbial community and oil biodegradation was observed during the wet season experiments due to high background nitrogen levels eliminating the effect of biostimulation. Larger variations were observed in the dry season experiments and were correlated to enhanced alkanes removal in the biostimulated microcosms, where Alphaproteobacteria dominated the total microbial community by the end of biodegradation (54%). Many hydrocarbonoclastic bacterial genera showed successive dominance during the operation affecting the ultimate performance of the microcosms. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd

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Biodegradation, Biostimulation, Dry and wet seasons, Microbial evolution, Sediment microbial community structure, Total petroleum hydrocarbons, Biodegradation, environmental, Geologic sediments, Hydrocarbons, Microbiota, Petroleum, Seasons, Alphaproteobacteria, Bacteria (microorganisms), Drought, Microorganisms, Natural attenuation, Oxic sediments, Submarine geology, Petroleum derivative, Hydrocarbon, Aerobic biodegradation, Contaminated marine sediments, Marine sediments, Microbial communities, Microbial community structures, Oil biodegradation, Petroleum hydrocarbons, Seasonal variation, Bioaccumulation, Crude oil, Marine sediment, Microbial community, Microcosm, Oxic conditions, Pah, Aerobic metabolism, Article, Bioremediation, Biotechnological procedures, Community structure, Evolution, Marine environment, Nonhuman, Sediment, Microflora, Season

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