Environmental pollution | 2019

Nitrate addition promotes the nitrogen cycling processes under the co-contaminated tetrabromobisphenol A and copper condition in river sediment.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA) and copper (Cu) are the main pollutants at e-waste recycling sites and the effects of their biotoxicity on microorganisms have drawn extensive attention. Nitrate-based bioremediation has been applied to organic pollutant-contaminated sediments since nitrate is a favorable electron acceptor for microbes. However, the effects of TBBPA and Cu on nitrogen (N)-cycling microorganisms and bioremediation in co-contaminated sediments remain unclear. Thus, our study examined the effects of TBBPA and Cu with/without nitrate addition on the TBBPA biodegradation efficiencies, microbial activities, and N functional genes. It was found the biodegradation efficiencies of TBBPA were improved by the nitrate addition from 34.7% to 59.3% and from 22.6% to 42.8% in the TBBPA and TBBPA-Cu contaminated groups, respectively. The inhibitions of the catalase activity increased with the nitrate addition because of the anaerobic respiration of the microorganisms. In addition, the potential denitrification rate exhibited an increasing trend from 6.46 to 8.23\u202fmg-N kg-1 dry sediment day-1 during the period of 15-90 days after adding nitrate to the co-contaminated group, whereas the potential nitrification rate exhibited an opposite trend and decreased from 4.47 to 3.19\u202fmg-N kg-1 dry sediment day-1. The denitrification gene abundances of the N-cycling genes were 107-108 orders of magnitude higher and significantly increased in the nitrate addition groups. The amoA gene abundances were lower than the denitrification gene abundances and were 105-106 orders of magnitude in the same groups. Moreover, the interaction types of the pollutants on the gene abundances were changed from synergistic to antagonistic as nitrate addition. Our study emphasized the gap of knowledge on nitrate addition affecting N-cycling microbes in the combined pollutants exposure sediments, and will be helpful for further bioremediation in different contaminated scenarios.

Volume 251
Pages \n 659-667\n
DOI 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.05.024
Language English
Journal Environmental pollution

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