INVESTIGADORES
RUBERTO Lucas Adolfo Mauro
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Hydrocarbon-contaminated soil bioremediation in Antarctica: Effectiveness of two consecutive year?s field assays in Carlini Station
Autor/es:
MARTINEZ ALVAREZ L; GUREVICH J; MAC CORMACK WP; RUBERTO L.
Lugar:
Kuala Lumpur
Reunión:
Congreso; SCAR Open Science 2016; 2016
Institución organizadora:
Scientific Committee of Antarctic Research
Resumen:
Soil contamination in Antarctica requires the development of simple remediation protocols, because availability of machinery and facilities is, in general, scarce. Bioremediation -and biostimulation in particularprovides a simple, low cost and effective tool to mend these soils. In this work, we compare the performance of two consecutive biostimulation field assays using biopiles. Assays were performed during 2013/2014 and 2014/2015 Argentinian Antarctic Expeditions in Carlini Station (25 de Mayo Island, South Shetland Islands).The treated soil ? approximately 480kg soil per system-was located on 800 µm polyethylene geomembrane and covered after amendment with Nitrogen and Phosphorus sources (Biostimulated systems, BS) in a previously optimized C:N:P ratio (Martinez Alvarez et al 2015). Similar biopiles without the addition ofnutrients were analyzed as well (Control systems, CC). Hydrocarbon removal percentages, biological activity,total and hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial counts, temperature, conductivity and moisture (in and outside thebiopiles) were evaluated during the entire experiments, both years. The results showed that the first-year field assay was more efficient in the removal of hydrocarbons from soil. Biostimulated system removed 75.79% of the contaminant in 50 days, while control biopile only 49.54% in this first assay. In the second experiment, BS biopile reached 55.04% of removal, and CC biopile 41.73%. Total bacterial counts and biological activity reached higher values in the first year; while degrading bacterial counts were higher in the second one, butno significant differences were found in these parameters between both years. In any case, when compared with results from the systems in which no biostimulation was performed, nutrient addition proved to enhance microbial activity. Significant differences were found between the temperatures reached inside biopiles between both years. The difference between temperature inside the biopile and surrounding soil climbed up to 1.3°C the first year, while only 0.3°C was the difference in the second year. This fact suggests thepossibility that differences in the hydrocarbon removal efficiency in biopiled field assays could be related to differences in the internal temperature of the biopiles, factor that clearly is strongly influenced by environmental temperature and total solar radiation received by the experimental systems.