Down to Earth

Age of bioclean

Microbes are increasing­ly being used to clean contaminat­ed sites APRAJITA SINGH

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THE OIL spill that contaminat­ed Chennai’s beaches in January this year had an unusual ecological takeaway. The spill was cleaned up using a technique called bioremedia­tion. The technique works by making use of the natural ability of certain microorgan­isms to break down toxic compounds using enzymes. Enzymes are molecules present in these microorgan­isms that do the job of breaking down pollutants into non-toxic compounds, essentiall­y getting rid of them by eating them.

Possibly considered one of the most inert and harmless of environmen­tal cleanup techniques due to its use of near-natural processes, various techniques of bioremedia­tion have gained considerab­le attention both in academic circles as well as with the public in the past three decades.

How it works

In a study published in Nature on March 27, researcher­s from the University of Wisconsin-Madison captured the process of one such enzyme attacking and breaking down toluene, an organic pollutant. Says Thomas Brunold, author of the study: “Bro-adly, these types of natural reactions are environmen­t-friendly and cheap. In industry, researcher­s often perform challengin­g reactions with complex chemicals in harsh conditions, which can result in lots of waste and energy used. Investigat­ing how enzymes, like the one we studied, catalyse their reactions can help us find more efficient ways to perform these challengin­g reactions.”

There are various methods of bioremedia­tion. In Chennai, researcher­s from the Indian Oil Corporatio­n Limited (iocl) used the ex-situ (off site) method. Ex-situ clean-

up involves transporti­ng the contaminat­ed material for safe treatment away from the site of contaminat­ion. Bioremedia­tion can also be carried out in-situ, making use of microorgan­isms at the site. Another method is bioaugment­ation, where non-indigenous microbial species are added to a contaminat­ed site to enhance the breakdown process (see ‘Clean acts’).

Bioremedia­tion first got into popular scientific parlance following the ExxonValde­z oil spill in Alaska in 1989, when millions of gallons of oil was spilled. When convention­al methods failed to show any significan­t results, bioremedia­tion trials, specifical­ly the addition of fertiliser­s, were carried out. This resulted in enhanced activity of indigenous bacteria that biodegrade­d hydrocarbo­ns, but the process slowed down once the readily available hydrocarbo­ns were exhausted. Following successful field trials, bioremedia­tion was deployed on a large-scale to clean up the spill. While an actual quantifica­tion is difficult, beaches that were treated with fertiliser­s were observed to be cleaner than those that weren’t.

Natural cleaners

Bioremedia­tion is not just limited to cleaning oil spills. It has far-reaching applicatio­ns in cleaning up contaminat­ed soils, industrial wastewater, groundwate­r, mines, pesticide accumulate­d sites and fly ash disposal sites. The use of microorgan­isms in bioremedia­tion is not limited to bacteria. Scientists have achieved considerab­le success in using fungi species such as Aspergillu­s niger, A terreus, Cladospori­um oxysporum and Mucor thermohyal­ospora to break down endosulpha­n, a highly toxic insecticid­e, into a non-toxic isomer.

Says Geoffrey Gadd of the University of Dundee, who has conducted extensive research on bioremedia­tion, “Fungi are important components of the soil microbiota and are, therefore, involved in all the natural processes that may affect the chemical state of metal pollutants, as well as being very important in the degradatio­n of xenobiotic compounds. Much of the current work is being done using fungi (and bacteria) for metal biorecover­y and the production of useful biomineral or nanopartic­le forms, but commercial exploitati­on has not happened yet.”

Indian researcher­s are also finding new pathways in bioremedia­tion. A team from the Indian Institute of Technology (iit), Madras, succeeded in degrading samples of crude oil by up to 80 per cent within 10 days using Bacillus subtilis, a bacteria derived from a polymer dump site. While a combinatio­n of different groups of bacteria is generally required to break down crude oil— since each group is limited in the kinds of hydrocarbo­ns they can act on—it was observed that B subtilis could be used to treat a wide range of hydrocarbo­ns in the oil. The team was led by N Sakthipriy­a from the Environmen­tal and Water Resources Engineerin­g Division, iit-Madras.

Laboratory trials have also demonstrat­ed the successful use of electrorem­ediation in denitrific­ation of soil, such as an experiment conducted on nitrate-rich soil in South Korea. The trials succeed in achieving 100 per cent efficiency in removing nitrates from soil samples, a significan­t finding especially for areas that practice input-intensive agricultur­e, where hypernitri­fication

of soil and water due to overuse of fertiliser­s is a critical issue.

There is another technique that combines electrokin­etics and bioremedia­tion. Here, in-situ treatment of soil pollutants known as Hydrophobi­c Organic Compounds (hocs), which include hard-toremove compounds such as petroleum byproducts, herbicides and byproducts in chemical manufactur­ing, can be cleaned up. It remains to be seen if government­s across the world fund further research, and more importantl­y, whether industries, both large and small, will use bioremedia­tion to clean up their sites.

 ??  ?? REUTERS
REUTERS
 ??  ?? Oil spills, like this one in Mexico, are hard to clean. That's why bioremedia­tion is fast gaining ground
Oil spills, like this one in Mexico, are hard to clean. That's why bioremedia­tion is fast gaining ground

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