75% off all plans

Bioremediation

On this page

Bioremediation Basics - Eco Clean-Up Crew

  • Definition: Using living organisms (mainly microbes) to degrade or detoxify environmental pollutants.
  • Goals: Convert contaminants to less harmful forms; achieve site clean-up.
  • Types:
    • In-situ (on-site): Bioventing, Biosparging, Bioaugmentation.
    • Ex-situ (off-site): Landfarming, Composting, Bioreactors. 📌 Mnemonic: In Situ Stays, Ex Situ Exits!
FeatureIn-situEx-situ
AdvantagesMinimal disruption, treats in placeFaster, controlled, wider contaminant range
DisadvantagesSlower, less control, site-dependentCostlier, excavation, transport risks
ExamplesBioventing, BiospargingLandfarming, Bioreactors
CostGenerally ↓Generally ↑

⭐ Intrinsic bioremediation (natural attenuation) relies on native microbial populations without human intervention.

Microbial Agents - Nature"s Recyclers

Key players breaking down pollutants:

  • Bacteria: Versatile degraders.
    • Pseudomonas (hydrocarbons), Bacillus (diverse organics), Rhodococcus (PCBs, oil).
    • 📌 Mnemonic: "Polluted Biosphere Recycled" (Pseudomonas, Bacillus, Rhodococcus)
  • Fungi: Ligninolytic enzymes.
    • Phanerochaete chrysosporium (White-rot): PAHs, DDT.
  • Algae: Photosynthetic; heavy metal bioaccumulation.
    • Chlorella, Scenedesmus: Heavy metals, nutrients.

Metabolic Processes:

  • Aerobic: $O_2$ as electron acceptor. For hydrocarbons.
    • $C_xH_y + O_2 \rightarrow CO_2 + H_2O$
  • Anaerobic: Alternative electron acceptors ($NO_3^-$, $SO_4^{2-}$). For chlorinated compounds (PCE, TCE).
  • Cometabolism: Pollutant degraded; no energy/carbon derived.

Genetic Engineering: Enhancing microbial capabilities (e.g., specific enzyme genes).

Dehalococcoides ethenogenes is crucial for anaerobic dechlorination of chlorinated solvents (PCE, TCE) to ethene.

Microbial Bioremediation Mechanisms

Influencing Factors - Setting the Stage

Optimal conditions are key for bioremediation success:

  • Environmental Factors: Govern microbial activity.
    • Temperature: Mesophilic (20-40°C) optimal; extremes hinder.
    • pH: Neutral (pH 6.5-7.5) preferred by most degraders.
    • Oxygen (O₂): Defines aerobic vs. anaerobic processes.
    • Moisture: Essential for microbial life & substrate transport.
    • Nutrients: Balanced C:N:P ratio (e.g., 100:10:1) vital.
    • Redox Potential ($E_h$): Affects metabolic pathways, electron acceptors.
  • Pollutant Factors: Characteristics of the contaminant.
    • Structure & Complexity: Simpler compounds degrade faster.
    • Concentration: Toxicity at high levels; low levels may not trigger degradation.
    • Bioavailability & Solubility: Accessibility to microbes is crucial.

⭐ Bioavailability is often the rate-limiting step in the bioremediation of hydrophobic pollutants.

Remediation Strategies - Pollution Busters

  • Core Approaches:
    • Biostimulation: Add nutrients (N, P)/O₂ to boost native microbes.
    • Bioaugmentation: Add specific microbes for tough pollutants.

      ⭐ Bioaugmentation is key when native microbes can't degrade resistant contaminants.

  • Biostimulation vs. Bioaugmentation:
    AspectBiostimulationBioaugmentation
    MechanismBoosts native microbesAdds specialized microbes
    InputsNutrients (N,P), O₂Microbial cultures
  • Phytoremediation (Plants): Uses plants (e.g., hyperaccumulators).
    • Phytoextraction: Plants store pollutants.
    • Phytodegradation: Plants break down pollutants.
    • Rhizofiltration: Roots filter water pollutants.
    • Phytostabilization: Plants immobilize soil pollutants. Cd uptake and molecular breeding for phytoremediation
  • Common Methods:
    • Landfarming: Soil tilled for aeration.
    • Composting: Organic matter aids breakdown.
    • Biopiles: Aerated soil heaps.
    • Bioreactors: Controlled systems (slurry/vapor).
  • Other Agents:
    • Mycoremediation: Fungi (e.g., white-rot) for complex pollutants.
    • Algal Bioremediation: Algae for nutrient/metal removal.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Bioremediation: Using microbes (bacteria, fungi) to degrade or detoxify pollutants.
  • In-situ: Treats contamination on-site (e.g., bioventing, biosparging).
  • Ex-situ: Involves excavation for off-site treatment (e.g., landfarming, bioreactors).
  • Bioaugmentation: Adds specific microbes; Biostimulation: Enhances native microbes via nutrient/O2 addition.
  • Key microbes: Pseudomonas (hydrocarbons), Phanerochaete (pesticides), Deinococcus (radiation).
  • Crucial factors: Pollutant nature, microbial activity, O2, nutrients, temperature, pH.

Continue reading on OnCourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy AI Tutor

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, our AI tutor, to explain anything you didn't understand

Practice Questions: Bioremediation

Test your understanding with these related questions

Process of mixing waste with cement before disposal is known as -

1 of 5

Flashcards: Bioremediation

1/5

_____ is a cause of pneumonia that is transmitted from water sources

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ is a cause of pneumonia that is transmitted from water sources

Legionella pneumophila

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE
Rezzy AI Tutor