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The potential use of Cordia myxa in the remediation of crude oil pollution.

Keyvan Valizadeh RadBabak MotesharezadehHossein Ali AlikhaniArezoo Dadrasnia
Published in: International journal of phytoremediation (2020)
This study investigated the effects of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria and organic matter on a crude oil-polluted soil by Cordia myxa. The treatments consisted of crude oil at two levels (3 and 6% w/w), municipal waste compost at two levels (5 and 10% v/v), and two different bacterial strains (Pseudomonas sp.141 and Pseudomonas sp. 27ps). At the end of the growth period, the plants were harvested and prepared for the laboratory analyses. The greatest population of oil degrading-bacteria (4.6 × 106 CFU/g soil) was observed in the treatment containing 10% compost, 6% crude oil, and Pseudomonas sp.141. The highest crude oil degradation (76.49%) was recorded in the soil polluted with 6% crude oil, amended with 10% compost, and inoculated with Pseudomonas sp.141. The investigation on the degradation of the chains of C10-C35 compounds indicated that, in various treatments, the most abundant compound was among those with fewer carbon atoms (C12-C25), so the application of organic matter boosted the degradation of crude oil. In conclusion, C. myxa seedlings has an acceptable efficiency in the remediation of the oil-contaminated soil affected by biological factors (compost and Pseudomonas bacteria), which is because of their high tolerance to the pollution and their ability to penetrate deeper soil layers.
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