Assessment of crude oil bioremediation potential of seawater and sediments from the shore of Lebanon in laboratory microcosms
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Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
With the planned oil and gas exploration activities off the coast of Lebanon, the risk of shoreline contamination with crude oil spills has become a major concern. This study aimed at assessing the crude oil bioremediation potential of the chronically polluted Lebanese shores in light of the continuous discharge of nutrient-rich sewage into the Mediterranean Sea and the long-lasting absence of proper sewage treatment systems. It was anticipated that, with the high pollution levels of the coastline, background concentrations of nutrients would be sufficient to sustain high intrinsic biodegradation rates without human intervention. Biodegradation experiments were conducted using crude oil-spiked beach sediments and seawater under natural attenuation and biostimulation conditions. The experiments were conducted at 18 and 28 °C to account for seasonal variation in temperature, background nutrient levels, and microbial communities. The biodegradability of oil constituents – namely alkanes and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), was monitored over a 42-day period using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Under biostimulation conditions, significant enhancement in the overall biodegradation rates of alkanes and PAHs was observed in seawater at 18 and 28 °C, while little to no improvement was measured at both temperatures in sediments where background nutrient levels were sufficient to induce near maximum intrinsic biodegradation rates. Under both natural attenuation and biostimulation treatments, the increase in temperature increased the oil biodegradation rates in sediment and seawater microcosms. In both instances, the overall trend in the biodegradation of individual alkanes and PAHs suggested a typical decrease in biodegradation rates with the increase in carbon number/rings and alkyl groups. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.
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Background nutrient levels, Bioremediation, Crude oil spills, Marine sediments, Seawater, Alkanes, Biodegradation, environmental, Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, Geologic sediments, Lebanon, Petroleum, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, Water pollutants, chemical, Mediterranean sea, Biodegradability, Biotechnology, Crude oil, Gas chromatography, Marine pollution, Mass spectrometry, Natural attenuation, Nutrients, Offshore gas fields, Oil spills, Paraffins, Petroleum prospecting, Sediments, Sewage treatment, Submarine geology, Alkane, Alkyl group, Carbon, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, Sea water, Background concentration, Biodegradation experiments, Crude oil bioremediation, Intrinsic biodegradation, Nutrient levels, Oil and gas exploration, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pahs), Assessment method, Laboratory method, Marine sediment, Microcosm, Nutrient, Oil spill, Shoreline, Article, Biodegradation, Concentration (parameter), Controlled study, Mass fragmentography, Microbial community, Nonhuman, Priority journal, Seashore, Seasonal variation, Sediment, Sewage treatment plant, Temperature, Water pollution, Analysis, Water pollutant