Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4424466 Environmental Pollution 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The presence of the synthetic estrogen 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) in the environment is of increasing concern due to the endocrine disruption of aquatic organisms. Incomplete removal from wastewater (WW) is one of the main sources of EE2 in aquatic ecosystems, thus improving processes like biological WW treatment/activated sludge (AS) is becoming significantly important. There are opposing results regarding EE2 biodegradability by AS; one discrepancy is the efficacy of heterotrophic bacteria. This research demonstrated the ability of heterotrophs commonly present in AS (B. subtilis, P. aeruginosa, P. putida, R. equi, R. erythropolis, R. rhodochrous, R. zopfii) to remove EE2. R. rhodochrous was the most successful with no detectable EE2 after 48 h; the other bacteria achieved 21%–61% EE2 removal. No additive or synergistic effects were observed due to the combination of the bacterial cultures with maximum EE2 removals of 43% after 300 h.

► Seven species of heterotrophic bacteria demonstrated the ability to degrade EE2. ► Rhodococcus species (especially R. rhodochrous) were the most successful. ► EE2 degradation by individual bacteria does not represent the capability of mixtures. ► Slight differences in bacterial mixture composition impact degradation trends.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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