Environmental Science and Pollution Research, volume 22, issue 20, pages 15248-15259

Effect of physical sediments reworking on hydrocarbon degradation and bacterial community structure in marine coastal sediments

Robert Duran 1, 2
Patricia Bonin 3
Ronan Jézéquel 4
Karine Dubosc 4
Claire Gassie 1
Fanny Terrisse 1
Justine Abella 1
Christine Cagnon 1
Cécile Militon 3
Valérie Michotey 3
Franck Gilbert 5, 6
Philippe Cuny 3
Cristiana Cravo-Laureau 1
Show full list: 13 authors
1
 
Equipe Environnement et Microbiologie, MELODY Group, Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour, Pau Cedex, France
2
 
Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour, PAU Cedex, France
4
 
Centre de Documentation, de Recherche et d’Expérimentations sur les pollutions accidentelles des Eaux, Brest, France
5
 
Université de Toulouse; INP, UPS; EcoLab (Laboratoire écologie fonctionnelle et environnement), Toulouse, France
6
 
CNRS; EcoLab, Toulouse, France
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2015-04-07
scimago Q1
SJR1.006
CiteScore8.7
Impact factor
ISSN09441344, 16147499
General Medicine
Environmental Chemistry
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Pollution
Abstract
The present study aimed to examine whether the physical reworking of sediments by harrowing would be suitable for favouring the hydrocarbon degradation in coastal marine sediments. Mudflat sediments were maintained in mesocosms under conditions as closer as possible to those prevailing in natural environments with tidal cycles. Sediments were contaminated with Ural blend crude oil, and in half of them, harrowing treatment was applied in order to mimic physical reworking of surface sediments. Hydrocarbon distribution within the sediment and its removal was followed during 286 days. The harrowing treatment allowed hydrocarbon compounds to penetrate the first 6 cm of the sediments, and biodegradation indexes (such as n-C18/phytane) indicated that biodegradation started 90 days before that observed in untreated control mesocosms. However, the harrowing treatment had a severe impact on benthic organisms reducing drastically the macrofaunal abundance and diversity. In the harrowing-treated mesocosms, the bacterial abundance, determined by 16S rRNA gene Q-PCR, was slightly increased; and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analyses of 16S rRNA genes showed distinct and specific bacterial community structure. Co-occurrence network and canonical correspondence analyses (CCA) based on T-RFLP data indicated the main correlations between bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) as well as the associations between OTUs and hydrocarbon compound contents further supported by clustered correlation (ClusCor) analysis. The analyses highlighted the OTUs constituting the network structural bases involved in hydrocarbon degradation. Negative correlations indicated the possible shifts in bacterial communities that occurred during the ecological succession.

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