The impact of bioaugmentation on dechlorination kinetics and on microbial dechlorinating communities in subsurface clay till

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Jacob Bælum
  • Charlotte Scheutz
  • Julie Claire Claudia Chambon
  • Christine Mosegaard Jensen
  • Rikke Prejh Brochmann
  • Philip Dennis
  • Troels Laier
  • Mette M Broholm
  • Poul L Bjerg
  • Philip John Binning
  • Carsten Suhr Jacobsen

A molecular study on how the abundance of the dechlorinating culture KB-1 affects dechlorination rates in clay till is presented. DNA extracts showed changes in abundance of specific dechlorinators as well as their functional genes. Independently of the KB-1 added, the microbial dechlorinator abundance increased to the same level in all treatments. In the non-bioaugmented microcosms the reductive dehalogenase gene bvcA increased in abundance, but when KB-1 was added the related vcrA gene increased while bvcA genes did not increase. Modeling showed higher vinyl-chloride dechlorination rates and shorter time for complete dechlorination to ethene with higher initial concentration of KB-1 culture, while cis-dichloroethene dechlorination rates were not affected by KB-1 concentrations. This study provides high resolution abundance profiles of Dehalococcoides spp. (DHC) and functional genes, highlights the ecological behavior of KB-1 in clay till, and reinforces the importance of using multiple functional genes as biomarkers for reductive dechlorination.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Pollution
Volume186
Pages (from-to)149-157
Number of pages9
ISSN0269-7491
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

    Research areas

  • Aluminum Silicates, Biodegradation, Environmental, DNA, Bacterial, Ethylenes, Halogenation, Kinetics, Models, Chemical, Soil Microbiology, Soil Pollutants, Vinyl Chloride

ID: 122994045