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Effects of Chlorella vulgaris Enhancement on Endogenous Microbial Degradation of Marine Oil Spills and Community Diversity.

Zhao SongMei LiuBo BaoJian GuoHengcong TaoBaikang ZhuQingguo Chen
Published in: Microorganisms (2022)
Biofortification could improve the bioremediation efficiency of microbes in the reparation of marine environmental damage caused by oil spills. In this paper, Chlorella vulgaris LH-1 was used as a fortifier to enhance the degradation of a marine oil spill by endogenous microorganisms. The addition of C. vulgaris LH-1 increased the degradation efficiency of crude oil by 11.09-42.41% and considerably accelerated oil degradation efficiency. Adding C. vulgaris LH-1 to a crude oil environment can improve the activity of endogenous seawater microorganisms. The results of high-throughput sequencing showed that the main bacterial genera were Oceanicola , Roseibacillus , and Rhodovulum when exotrophic C. vulgaris LH-1 and seawater endogenous microorganisms degraded low-concentration crude oil together. However, the addition of high-concentration nutrient salts changed the main bacterial genera in seawater to unclassified Microbacterium , Erythrobacter , and Phaeodactylibacter . The addition of C. vulgaris LH-1 increased the abundance of marine bacteria, Rhodococcus , and Methylophaga and decreased the abundance of Pseudomonas , Cladosporium , and Aspergillus . The functional prediction results of phylogenetic investigation of communities by reconstruction of unobserved states indicated that C. vulgaris LH-1 could improve the metabolic ability of seawater endogenous microorganisms to degrade endogenous bacteria and fungi in crude oil.
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