Development of a standard bacterial consortium for laboratory efficacy testing of commercial freshwater oil spill bioremediation agents
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology
- Vol. 21 (6) , 322-330
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jim.2900594
Abstract
Six crude oil-degrading bacterial strains isolated from different soil and water environments were combined to create a defined consortium for use in standardized efficacy testing of commercial oil spill bioremediation agents (OSBA). The isolates were cryopreserved in individual aliquots at pre-determined cell densities, stored at −70°C, and thawed for use as standardized inocula as needed. Aliquots were prepared with precision (typically within 10% of the mean) ensuring reproducible inoculation. Five of the six strains displayed no appreciable loss of viability during cryopreservation exceeding 2.5 years, and five isolates demonstrated stable hydrocarbon-degrading phenotypes during inoculum preparation and storage. When resuscitated, the defined consortium reproducibly biodegraded Alberta Sweet Mixed Blend crude oil (typically ± 7% of the mean of triplicate cultures), as determined by quantitative gas chromatography–mass spectrometry of various analyte classes. Reproducible biodegradation was observed within a batch of inoculum in trials spanning 2.5 years, and among three batches of inoculum prepared more than 2 years apart. Biodegradation was comparable after incubation for 28 days at 10°C or 14 days at 22°C, illustrating the temperature tolerance of the bacterial consortium. The results support the use of the synthetic consortium as a reproducible, predictable inoculum to achieve standardized efficacy tests for evaluating commercial OSBA.Keywords
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