Wikipedia
Bioremediation can be defined as any process that uses microorganisms or their enzymes to return the Natural environment environment altered by contaminants to its original condition. Bioremediation may be employed in order to attack specific contaminants, such as chlorinechlorinated pesticides that are degraded by bacteriumbacteria, or a more general approach may be taken, such as oil spills that are broken down by the use of multiple techniques including the addition of nitrate and sulfate fertilizer to facilitate the decomposition of crude oil by indigenous or exogenous bacteria.Not all contaminants are easily treated through the use of bioremediation; for example, heavy metals such as cadmium and lead are not readily absorbed or captured by organisms. The integration of metals such as mercury (element)mercury into the food chain may make things worse as organisms bioaccumulate these metals.However, there are a number of advantages to bioremediation, which may be employed in areas that cannot be reached easily without Earthworks (engineering)excavation. For example, hydrocarbon spills (specifically, petrol spills) or certain chlorinated solvents may contaminate groundwater in the subsurface and injecting the appropriate organisms, in conjunction with electron acceptor or electron donor amendment, as appropriate, may significantly reduce contaminant concentrations after a period of time. This is typically much less expensive than excavation followed by disposal elsewhere, incineration or other ''ex situ'' treatment, and reduces or eliminates the need for pumping and treatment, which is a common practice at sites where hydrocarbons have contaminated groundwater.Generally, bioremediation technologies can be classified as ''in situ'' or ''ex situ''. ''In situ'' bioremediation involves treating the contaminated material at the site while ''ex situ'' involves the removal of the contaminated material to be treated elsewhere. Some examples of bioremediation technologies are bioventing, landfarming, bioreactor, composting, bioaugmentation and biostimulation.
Monitoring bioremediation - The process of bioremediation can be monitored indirectly by measuring the ''Oxidation Reduction Potential'' or redox in soil and groundwater, together with pH, temperature, oxygen content and concentration of breakdown products (e.g. carbon dioxide). This table shows the (decreasing) biological breakdown rate as function of the redox potential. | | Redox? potential (Eh in Volt!mV) |
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aerobic:& lt;/td> | O2? + 4e- + 4H+ → !2H2O< ;/td> | 600 — !400 | anaerobic: td> | | denitrifi cation | 2NO3 -? + 10e- + 12H+ → N2 + 6H2O | 500 — !200 | &nb sp;manganese? IV reduction | MnO2 + 2e- + 4H+ → !Mn2< sup>+? + 2H2O | 400 — !200 | iron III reduction | Fe(OH)&l t;sub>3? + e- + 3H+ → Fe2+ + 3H2O | 300 — !100 | sulfate reduction | SO42 -? +8e- +10H+ → H2S + 4H2O | 0 — !-150 | < tr>fermentat ion | 2CH2O? → CO2 + CH4 | -150 — !-220 | < /table>This,? by itself and at a single site, gives little information about the process of remediation. # it is necessary to sample enough points on and around the contaminated site to be able to determine contour linecontours of equal redox potential. Contouring is usually done using specialised software, e.g. using Kriging interpolation. # if all the measurements of redox potential show is that electron acceptors have been used up, it is in effect an indicator for total microbial activity. Chemical analysis is also required in order to demonstrate that levels of hydrocarbons and breakdown products have been reduced by remediation to below regulatory limits.
See also - BiodegradationDutch standardsList of environment topicsPhytoremediationLiving machines
External links - genomenewsnetwork.org - Bioremediation (Toxic Cleanup) News from Genome News Network (GNN) bioremediationgroup.org - Bioremediation Discussion Group (BioGroup)
References - Lovley, D. R. (2003). Cleaning up with genomics. In ''Nature reviews microbiology, 1'', 35 – !44.Category:BiotechnologyCateg ory:MicrobiologyCategory:Envir onmentalismcs:Bioeremediacede: Bioremediationes:Biorremediaci ónfr:Bioremédiation
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