Aliphatic Hydrocarbon Enhances Phenanthrene Degradation by Autochthonous Prokaryotic Communities from a Pristine Seawater

Rodrigues, E. M., Morais, D. K., Pylro, V. S., Redmile-Gordon, Marc, de Oliveira, J. A., Roesch, L. F. W., Cesar, D. E. and Tótola, M. R. (2017) Aliphatic Hydrocarbon Enhances Phenanthrene Degradation by Autochthonous Prokaryotic Communities from a Pristine Seawater. Microbial Ecology, 75 (3). pp. 688-700. 10.1007/s00248-017-1078-8
Copy

The microbial diversity and functioning around oceanic islands is poorly described, despite its importance for ecosystem homeostasis. Here, we aimed to verify the occurrence of microbe-driven phenanthrene co-oxidation in the seawater surrounding the Trindade Island (Brazil). We also used Next-Generation Sequencing to evaluate the effects of aliphatic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) on these microbial community assemblies. Microcosms containing seawater from the island enriched with either labelled (9-14C) or non-labelled phenanthrene together with hexadecane, weathered oil, fluoranthene or pyrene, and combinations of these compounds were incubated. Biodegradation of phenanthrene-9-14C was negatively affected in the presence of weathered oil and PAHs but increased in the presence of hexadecane. PAH contamination caused shifts in the seawater microbial community—from a highly diverse one dominated by Alphaproteobacteria to less diverse communities dominated by Gammaproteobacteria. Furthermore, the combination of PAHs exerted a compounded negative influence on the microbial community, reducing its diversity and thus functional capacity of the ecosystem. These results advance our understanding of bacterial community dynamics in response to contrasting qualities of hydrocarbon contamination. This understanding is fundamental in the application and monitoring of bioremediation strategies if accidents involving oil spillages occur near Trindade Island and similar ecosystems.

mail Request Copy

picture_as_pdf
Rodrigues2018_Article_AliphaticHydrocarbonEnhancesPh.pdf
subject
Published Version
lock
Restricted to Repository staff only
Creative Commons Attribution
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Request Copy

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core OpenURL ContextObject Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL RIOXX2 XML ASCII Citation MODS METS OpenURL ContextObject in Span HTML Citation OPENAIRE
Export

Downloads