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Colonized beads as inoculum for marine biodegradability assessment: application to Linear Alkylbenzene Sulfonate
Mauffret, A.; Rottiers, A.; Federle, T.; Gillan, D.C.; Hampel, M.; Blasco, J.; Temara, A. (2009). Colonized beads as inoculum for marine biodegradability assessment: application to Linear Alkylbenzene Sulfonate. Environ. Int. 35(6): 885-892. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2009.03.007
In: Environment International. Pergamon: New York. ISSN 0160-4120; e-ISSN 1873-6750, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Marine; Biodegradation; LAS; Colonized beads; Biofilm

Authors  Top 
  • Mauffret, A., more
  • Rottiers, A.
  • Federle, T.
  • Gillan, D.C., more
  • Hampel, M.
  • Blasco, J.
  • Temara, A., more

Abstract
    An innovative biodegradation test system was developed in order to fill the current gap for cost effective and environmentally relevant tools to assess marine biodegradability. Glass beads were colonized by a biofilm in an open flow-through system of seawater with continuous pre-exposure to Linear Alkylbenzene Sulfonate (LAS) (20 µg/L). Thereafter, such colonized beads were added as inoculum in different test systems. [14C]-LAS (5–100 µg/L) was added and primary and ultimate biodegradation were assessed. The bacterial density collected on the beads (109 bact./mL beads) was ca. 3 orders of magnitude higher than the typical seawater content. The LAS mineralization lag phase duration decreased from 55 to < 1 days and the mineralization extent increased from 53 to 90% as the colonized beads volume increased from 10 to 275 mL. This is the first demonstration of marine bacteria's ability to mineralize LAS. On the opposite, less than 13% LAS was mineralized in seawater only. The colonized beads possibly enhanced the probability to encounter the full degraders' consortium in a low volume of seawater (100 mL).

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