Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4997849 | Bioresource Technology | 2017 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
The aim of this work was to study biodegradation of crude oil by defined co-cultures of indigenous bacterial consortium and exogenous Bacillus subtilis. Through residual oil analysis, it is apparent that the defined co-culture displayed a degradation ratio (85.01%) superior to indigenous bacterial consortium (71.32%) after 7Â days of incubation when ratio of inoculation size of indigenous bacterial consortium and Bacillus subtilis was 2:1. Long-chain n-alkanes could be degraded markedly by Bacillus subtilis. Result analysis of the bacterial community showed that a decrease in bacterial diversity in the defined co-culture and the enrichment of Burkholderiales order (98.1%) degrading hydrocarbons. The research results revealed that the promising potential of the defined co-culture for application to degradation of crude oil.
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Authors
Kaiyun Tao, Xiaoyan Liu, Xueping Chen, Xiaoxin Hu, Liya Cao, Xiaoyu Yuan,