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Bioaugmentation and rhizosphere-assisted biodegradation as strategies for optimization of the dissipation capacity of biobeds

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Auteur
Campos M., Perruchon C., Karas P.A., Karavasilis D., Diez M.C., Karpouzas D.G.
Date
2017
Language
en
DOI
10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.11.031
Sujet
Alphaproteobacteria
Arthrobacter
Firmicutes
Lolium
3,5-dichloroaniline
5 amino 4 imidazolecarboxamide
acid phosphatase
aniline derivative
beta glucosidase
hydantoin derivative
iprodione
pesticide
agricultural land
analogs and derivatives
Arthrobacter
bioremediation
half life time
Lolium
metabolism
procedures
rhizosphere
waste management
Acid Phosphatase
Aminoimidazole Carboxamide
Aniline Compounds
Arthrobacter
beta-Glucosidase
Biodegradation, Environmental
Farms
Half-Life
Hydantoins
Lolium
Pesticides
Rhizosphere
Waste Management
Academic Press
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Résumé
Biobeds are on-farm biodepuration systems whose efficiency rely on their high pesticide biodegradation capacity. We evaluated two optimization strategies, bioaugmentation and/or rhizosphere-assisted biodegradation, to maximize the dissipation capacity of biobeds. Iprodione was used as a model pesticide. Its dissipation and metabolism was determined in a biobed packing material inoculated with an iprodione-degrading Arthrobacter strain C1 (bioaugmentation, treatments B+C1) and/or seeded with ryegrass (rhizosphere-assisted biodegradation, treatments B+P). The impact of those strategies on the activity and composition of the microbial community was determined. Bioaugmentation accelerated the dissipation of iprodione which was further enhanced in the bioaugmented, rhizosphere-assisted treatment (treatment B+P+C1, Half-life (DT50) = 3.4 d), compared to the non-bioaugmented, non rhizosphere-assisted control (DT50 = 9.5 d, treatment B). Bioaugmentation resulted in the earlier formation of intermediate formation of metabolites I (3,5-dichlorophenyl-carboxamide), II (3,5-dichlorophenylurea acetate) and 3,5-dichloroaniline (3,5-DCA). The latter was further dissipated by the indigenous microbial community. Acid phosphatase (AP) and β-glucosidase (GLU) were temporarily stimulated in rhizosphere-assisted treatments, whereas a stimulation of the fluorescein diacetate (FDA) hydrolytic activity in the bioaugmented treatments coincided with the hydrolysis of iprodione. q-PCR showed that changes in the abundance of alpha-proteobacteria and firmicutes was driven by the presence of rhizosphere while bioaugmentation had no significant effect. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/72228
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