Bioremediation

From MicrobeWiki, the student-edited microbiology resource
Revision as of 04:47, 12 February 2008 by Sdemetriou (talk | contribs)

Introduction

Bioremediation refers to the use of microorganisms to degrade contaminants that pose environmental, and especially human risks. It has become an accepted remedy to clean-ups due to its safety and convenience. The process relies on the microorganisms that are natural to the soil, and also allows scientists to solve the problem right at the site of contamination. [1]

Bioremediation Applications

Examples

Degradation Pathways

Environmental Considerations

Advantages/Possibilities

Monitoring

Microorganisms

microbe

Pseudomonas putida is a gram-negative soil bacterium that is involved in the bioremediation of toulene, a component of paint thinner. It is also capable of degrading naphthalene, a product of petroleum refining, in contaminated soils. [2]

Industrial bioremediation is used to clean up wastewater. Most treatment systems rely on microbial activity to remove unwanted compounds from the wastewater, for example fixed nitrogen compounds (i.e. ammonia). The reduction of ammonia to dinitrogen gas involves two different microbes. First, Nitrosomonas europaea reduces ammonia to nitrite. Then, Paracoccus denitrificans reduces nitrite to dinitrogen gas. Therefore, the nitrogen pollution in the wastewater is eliminated as the gas escapes to the atmosphere. Denitrification is the process of consuming fixed forms of nitrogen as the electron acceptor in anaerobic conditions and reducing it to dinitrogen gas.

Current Research

References

1. United States Environmental Protection Agency, "A Citizen's Guide to Bioremediation" 2001.

Edited by student of Kate Scow