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Mesocosm Studies on the Efficacy of Bioamended Activated Carbon for Treating PCB-Impacted Sediment Rayford B. Payne, Upal Ghosh, Harold Douglas May, Christopher W. Marshall, and Kevin R Sowers Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01935 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 16, 2017
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Mesocosm Studies on the Efficacy of Bioamended Activated Carbon
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for Treating PCB-Impacted Sediment
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Rayford B Payne†, Upal Ghosh‡, Harold D May§, Christopher W. Marshallǁ⊥, and Kevin R
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Sowers†*
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†
Department of Marine Biotechnology, Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology,
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University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore MD ‡
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Department of Chemical, Biochemical, and Environmental Engineering, University of
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Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore MD §
Marine Biomedicine and Environmental Science Center, Department of Microbiology and
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Immunology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston SC ǁ
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Biosciences Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Illinois
⊥
Current Address: Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
* Corresponding author: Kevin Sowers, Department of Marine Biotechnology, Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology, 701 E. Pratt St., Baltimore, Maryland 21202 Telephone: (410) 234-8878/FAX: (410) 234-8896, e-mail:
[email protected] 24
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ABSTRACT
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This report describes results of a bench-scale treatability study to evaluate the efficacy of
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bioaugmentation with bioamended activated carbon (AC) for in-situ treatment of polychlorinated
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biphenyl (PCB) impacted sediments.
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microorganisms to degrade and reduce the overall concentration of PCBs in sediment was
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determined in 2 L recirculating mesocosms designed to simulate conditions in Abraham’s Creek
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in Quantico, Virginia. Ten sediment mesocosms were tested for the effects of AC alone, AC
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with slow release electron donor (cellulose) and different concentrations and combinations of
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PCB dehalogenating and degrading microorganisms added as bioamendments. A 78% reduction
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of total PCBs was observed using a cell titer of 5 × 105 Dehalobium chlorocoercia and
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Paraburkholderia xenovorans cells g-1 sediment with 1.5% AC as a delivery system. Levels of
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both higher and lower chlorinated congeners were reduced throughout the sediment column
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indicating that both anaerobic reductive dechlorination and aerobic degradation occurred
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concurrently.
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bioaugmented treatments. Toxicity associated with co-planar PCBs was reduced by 90% after
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treatment based on toxic equivalency of dioxin-like congeners. These results suggest that an in
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situ treatment employing the simultaneous application of anaerobic and aerobic microorganisms
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on AC could be an effective, environmentally sustainable strategy to reduce PCB levels in
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contaminated sediment.
To this end, the ability of PCB transforming
Porewater concentrations of all PCB homologs were reduced 94-97% for
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INTRODUCTION
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Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were used widely in transformers, capacitors and other
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electrical applications for over five decades because of their superior flame resistance and
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insulating properties 1. Other common uses included fluorescent light ballasts, inks, paints,
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hydraulic oils, adhesives and carbonless paper. The manufacture of PCBs was banned in the
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United States in 1979 and worldwide in 2001.
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environment during their widespread use, PCBs continue to pose a health risk because their
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propensity for bioaccumulation in food chains and potential toxicity as a result of consumption
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by animals and humans 1.
However, as a result of release into the
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The commonly accepted methods for treatment of sediments impacted with PCBs are
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dredging and disposal or capping. Dredging is effective for reducing PCB levels in sediments,
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but it is costly, disruptive to the ecosystems and increases the potential risk if PCBs are released
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into the water 2. Capping with passive materials such as sand is an effective treatment approach
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for containment of PCBs in sediment, but because it is subject to potential abiotic and biotic
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disruption it does not completely eliminate the risk of later exposure and can be disruptive to the
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existing ecosystem 3. A recently developed method that is gaining acceptance is the application
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of amendments such as activated carbon (AC) to PCB impacted sediments to sequester PCBs 4.
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By sequestering soluble PCBs, AC effectively decreases the bioavailability of PCBs thereby
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minimizing the risk of exposure to the food chain 5. However, none of these methods has the
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potential to accelerate the degradation of PCBs beyond the rates observed for natural attenuation.
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Biological degradation of PCBs in the environment occurs by anaerobic dechlorination of
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highly chlorinated congeners followed by the aerobic degradation of the dechlorination products.
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The primary rate-limiting factor is the low native abundance of PCB dechlorinators in sediments
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PCB impacted sediment. For example, sequential treatment of PCB impacted sediment in an
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anaerobic PCB halorespiring enrichment followed by transfer in an aerobic culture containing
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Paraburkholderia xenovorans LB400 was reported to degrade weathered Aroclor 1248 and
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Aroclor 1260 by as much a 70% and 67%, respectively
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demonstrated the complementary role of anaerobic dechlorination and aerobic degradation in
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PCB degradation, they were conducted in closed microcosms with controlled redox conditions.
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In addition, delivery of microorganisms through a water column into sediments at field scale is a
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challenge. A promising approach is to deliver the microorganisms on solid particles that could
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integrate into the sediment environment.
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extensive dechlorination in Aroclor 1260 enriched sediment microcosms amended with AC.
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Payne et al. 10-11 applied granular activated carbon in the form of SediMite™ 4, a pelletized form
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of AC, inoculated with anaerobic halorespiring and aerobic degrading bacteria in static estuarine
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Baltimore Harbor sediment mesocosms and observed over 75% reduction in weathered Aroclor
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1260 levels in only 120 days.
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bioamendments, the report demonstrated that AC in principle could be used as a delivery system
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for PCB degrading microorganisms that would form a solid substrate for active microbial
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transformation. However, the study only tested two microorganisms at a single cell titer.
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. Thus, enhancing this natural process with bioaugmentation is a potential treatment strategy for
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. However, although both studies
Kjellerup et al.
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reported a shift towards more
In addition to enhanced degradation of PCB levels by the
A key aspect of planning a bioremediation field application is determining the optimal
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loading rate of treatment material into the sediment.
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parameters for optimal efficacy of bioaugmentation using pelletized AC as a potential carrier to
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deliver PCB degrading microorganisms to PCB impacted sediments.
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conducted in mesocosms containing PCB contaminated sediment from a watershed drainage
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In this study, we test and identify
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pond adjacent to Chopawamsic Creek, a tributary of the Potomac River. The study employs
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static sediment mesocosms with recirculating overlying water to simulate in situ redox
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conditions by maintaining a dissolved oxygen concentration in the water column similar to that
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in the water column at the site. Parameters tested include effects of organic carbon,
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bioamendment titer, and different combinations of microorganisms on the total and porewater
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concentration of PCBs in sediments over the course of 375 days.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Sediment collection and homogenization. PCB impacted sediment (25 L) was collected on 18
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October, 2012 from Abraham’s Creek in Quantico, VA with a grab sampler at 39°16.8 N,
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76°36.2 W and transported to the lab in four sealed 20 L polypropylene buckets. Water for the
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treatability study was collected from the site in a 20 L carboy. Sediment collected from the site
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was transferred to a 100 L basin in an anaerobic glove bag under a nitrogen atmosphere and the
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pooled sediment was thoroughly mixed with a 10 cm mud mixer (TBC Inc., Long Beach, CA)
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mounted on a power drill. Sediment was stored in the dark at 4°C prior to use.
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Preparation of bioamended AC. Halorespiring (PCB dehalogenating) bacteria were grown
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anaerobically in estuarine mineral medium (ECl)
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with the following electron donors and acceptors, respectively: “Dehalobium chlorocoercia”
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DF-1 12 with sodium formate (10 mM) and PCB 61 (2,3,4,5-tetrachlorobiphenyl; 173 µM), strain
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o-17
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Chloroflexus phylotypes SF1 and DEH10 14 with a fatty acid mixture containing sodium salts of
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acetate, propionate and butyrate (2.5 mM each) and Aroclor 1260 (100 mg L-1). Cultures were
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grown in 160-ml serum bottles containing 50 ml of medium sealed under N2-CO2 (4:1) with 20-
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mm Teflon-coated butyl stoppers (West Pharmaceutical, Inc., Exton, PA) and incubated
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statically at 30°C in the dark. For preparation of the bioamendment, halorespiring bacteria were
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twice sub-cultured 1:10 in 500 mL medium with 100 µM PCE substituted for PCB as the
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electron acceptor to remove any residual PCBs. The halorespiring cultures were harvested
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anaerobically under N2-CO2 (4:1) by centrifugation in 250 mL Oakridge bottles 15. Cell pellets
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12
. Halorespiring cultures were maintained
with sodium acetate (10 mM) and PCB 65 (2,3,5,6-tetrachlorobiphenyl; 173 µM) and
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were resuspended in 100 mL of ECl medium without PCE to a final concentration of 5 × 107
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cells mL-1. Paraburkholderia xenovorans LB400 16,17 was grown aerobically in M9 minimal medium
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with solid biphenyl crystals (5 mM; solubility in water, 2.89×10-2 mM) as the carbon source
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and electron donor as described previously
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were incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 100 rpm to an O.D.600 of 1.0 (ca. 4×108 cells mL-1),
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harvested by centrifugation, and the cell pellet was suspended in 100 mL of sterile M9 medium
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without biphenyl.
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. Cultures (100 ml) in 500 ml Erlenmeyer flasks
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Immediately before addition to mesocosms the anaerobe (DF-1, ο-17 and/or SF1-
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DEH10) and aerobe (LB400) were combined in a manual pump sprayer reservoir (1.75 L Flo-
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Master 56HD, Root-Lowell Mfc Co., Lowell, MI). For each mesocosm the concentrated cultures
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were sprayed onto 70 g of SediMite™ pellets (Sediment Solutions, Ellicott City MD), an
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aggregate of activated carbon (AC), sand, clay binder and where indicated 1% cellulose, at
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concentrations indicated below. Bioamended AC was immediately mixed into mesocosms as
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indicated below with a Teflon spoon and mesocosms were allowed to settle for 4 hours before
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baseline sampling. The final concentration of SediMite™ in sediment was 3% for a final
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concentration of 1.5% (dry wt) AC.
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Preparation of mesocosms. Aliquots of homogenized sediment (1.75 L) were transferred under
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an atmosphere of N2 in an anaerobic glove bag to two-liter thin layer chromatography tanks (ID
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in cm: 8W x 27H x 12D, sediment depth 6 cm, water depth 2 cm) modified as shown in Figure
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S1. After treatments shown in Table 1, the tanks were sealed with glass plates aerated water
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collected from the site was continuously circulated with a 12-channel peristaltic pump (Watson-
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Marlow) at a hydraulic retention time of one hour. The aerated water entered the tanks through a
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stainless steel manifold to create a linear flow over the surface of the sediment, thereby
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minimizing the risk of PCB loss due to volatilization and sediment turbation into the water
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column Aerated water was pumped from a sparging flask containing a fritted glass gassing tube
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connected to an air supply. The dissolved oxygen concentration in the water column, measured
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with a polarographic electrode (Mettler Toledo, Columbus OH), was maintained at 6.7±0.3 mg
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kg-1 at the mesocosm inlets and 6.5±0.3 mg kg-1 at the outlets, which is equivalent to 6.75 mg kg-
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1
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Amberlite XAD-2 (Rohm & Haas Co, Newark, DE) resin in the base of the sparging flask to
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remove soluble PCBs prior to aeration. Mesocosms were operated at a temperature of 22-24oC
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in the dark.
reported at the site in June 2012. Water flowing out of the mesocosm was passed through
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Sediment analysis. Sediment TOC analysis was performed as described by Grossman and
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Ghosh
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5000A) and non-dispersive infrared gas analyzer as recommended by the manufacturer.
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using a Shimadzu TOC analyzer with a solids sample module (TOC-5000A and SSM-
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PCB extraction and analysis of sediment. Sediment mesocosms were sampled in triplicate
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using a sterile 5 mL syringe barrel as a coring device. A numbered grid and random number
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generator were used to ensure that samples were collected from random locations.
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Approximately 5g wet weight sediment was dried with pelletized diatomaceous earth (Dionex,
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Sunnyvale, CA) in a desiccator at room temperature. The dried sediment (1 g) was extracted
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with an Accelerated Solvent Extractor (Dionex) following EPA method 3545 as described
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previously 10. PCB 166 (10 µl stock of 400 µg L-1 hexane) was added as a surrogate to correct
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for extraction efficiency. PCBs 30 and 204 (400 µg L-1 each in 10 µl acetone) were added as
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internal standards.
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PCB congeners were analyzed using a Hewlett-Packard 6890 series II gas chromatograph
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(GC) with a DB-1 capillary column (60 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm; JW Scientific, Folsom, CA)
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and a
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congeners resolved in 130 individual peaks
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resolved and analyzed using a Hewlett-Packard 5890 series II gas chromatograph (GC) with a
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HT8 8% phenyl polycarborane-siloxane capillary column (60 m × 0.22 mm × 0.25 µm; SGE)
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and a 63Ni electron capture detector as described previously 21. PCB congeners 77, 81, 105, 114,
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118, 123, 126, 169, 156, 157, 167 and 189 were quantified with a 10-point calibration curve (2-
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800 µg L-1) using PCBs 30 and 204 as internal standards.
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Ni electron capture detector by a modified method of EPA 8082, which detected 173 10
. Co-planar dioxin-like PCB congeners were
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PCB extraction and analysis of passive samplers and XAD resin. Polyoxymethylene (POM,
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77 µM; CS Hyde Co., Lake Villa, IL) membranes cut into 1 x 7 cm strips were pre-cleaned with
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hexane followed by methanol, then secured in stainless steel screens with aluminum staples.
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Three POM samplers were inserted vertically in the sediment column of each mesocosm. The
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samplers were removed from the mesocosms 120 and 375 days after treatments, rinsed with
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water to remove sediment, and analyzed for PCBs as described in Beckingham et al.
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concentrations in POM were converted to estimated PCB concentrations in the porewater phase
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based on equilibrium partitioning constants 23. Performance reference compounds were not used.
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Amberlite XAD-2 resin (Rhom & Haas, Philadelphia, PA) was pre-cleaned with hexane
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followed by methanol prior to use and extracted for PCB analysis after 375 days as described
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above for the passive samplers.
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. PCB
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DNA extraction and enumeration of bacterial bioamendments. DNA was extracted by
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adding 0.25 g sediment (wet wt.) from each sample core to a PowerBead microcentrifuge tube
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(Power Soil DNA Isolation Kit, MOBIO Laboratories, Inc., Carlsbad, CA) as previously
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described 10. Extracted DNA samples had an A260/280 ratio of ≥ 1.6 and an A260/230 ratio of ≥
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2.0. Enumeration of microorganisms in each subcore was performed by real-time quantitative
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PCR (qPCR) using iQ SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). Primers
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included CIOP0/CIOP1 specific for the bphA gene operon of Paraburkholderia xenovorans
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LB400 and SKFPat9F/SKFPat9R specific for a putative reductive dehalogenase of “Dehalobium
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chlorocoercia” DF-1 as previously described
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enumerated by qPCR using primers Chl348F/Dehal844R specific for genes encoding 16S rRNA
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in the halorespiring chloroflexi
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with R2 = 0.999.
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(CIOP0/CIOP1), 1.3 (SKFPat9F/SKFPat9R) and 2.9 (Chl348F/Dehal844R).
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10-11, 24
.
All other halorespiring strains were
. Amplification efficiencies of standards were >89.0±9.0%
The linear range was 0.1 to 1x10-6 ng and the y-intercept was 1.2
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Analysis of the microbial community. DNA was prepared for amplification using the 5PRIME
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MasterMix (5 PRIME, Inc, Gaithersburg, MD) and 0.2 µM 515F/806R primers
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amplified using the following conditions: 3 minutes at 94°C, 35 cycles of 94°C for 45 seconds,
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50°C for 1 minute, and 72°C for 1.5 minutes, with a final extension for 10 min at 72°C.
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Amplicons were then pooled to 70 ng DNA per sample, and a clean pool was then generated
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using the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany). DNA was prepared for
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amplification using the 5PRIME MasterMix (5 PRIME, Inc.) and 0.2 µM of 515F/806R primers
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targeting the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene. Clean pools were sequenced on an Illumina
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. DNA was
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MiSeq using V3 chemistry to obtain 2x150 base pair reads. The average sequencing coverage
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was over 17,000 sequences per sample.
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Materials.
Community analyses are described in Supplemental
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Data availability. Study: PRJNA355587 (SRP095095), sample: PCB mesocosms
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(SRS1859570), experiment: mesocosm_seqs (SRX2422444), run: mesocosm_seqs.fastq.gz
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(SRR5110056).
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RESULTS and DISCUSSION
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Effect of treatments on reductive dechlorination and degradation of PCBs. Water content of
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the homogenized sediment was 74% ± 6 and total organic carbon (TOC) was 6.7% ± 0.5. Total
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PCB concentration in the pooled sediment samples was 3.40 ± 0.50 mg kg-1 with a mean of 3.5 ±
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0.1 chlorines per biphenyl. Additional characterization of sediment is provided in Supplemental
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Materials. The effect of treatments on PCB levels in Abraham’s Creek sediment is shown in
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Figure 1 and Table 2. The results in non-bioamended treatments 1, 2 and 3 indicate that there
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was no significant (ρ>0.05) biostimulation of indigenous bacterial populations or abiotic loss as
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a result of mixing, addition of AC, or addition of cellulose as a carbon source. This observation
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indicates that biostimulation of indigenous halorespiring and degrading PCB microorganisms
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would not be effective for reduction of PCB levels in Abraham’s Creek sediment at rates greater
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than those observed for natural attenuation.
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All bioamended treatments showed significant degradation with the exception of
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treatments 4 and 9. A titer of 103 cells g-1 showed no significant effect on PCB concentration
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over the course of 375 days, whereas bioamended treatments 5 and 6 showed significant
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degradation, activity, 58 and 78%, respectively. In treatment 6 most of the degradation, 55%,
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was observed in the first 30 days and maximum degradation of 78% was observed in treatment 6
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after 120 days. This value is similar to the maximum value of 80% total PCB reduction observed
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365 days after bioamendment of weathered Baltimore Harbor sediment mesocosms reported by
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Payne et al. 11. In contrast, degradation in treatment 5, 7, 8, 9 and 10 continued after 120 days.
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The addition of cellulose as a slow release carbon source in combination with
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bioamendments appeared to increase the extent of PCB reduction. However, the difference in
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PCB levels after 376 days in treatment 6, which contained 105 cells g-1 of DF-1 and LB400 with
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cellulose, and treatment 7, which contained the same bioamendment titer without cellulose was
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not significant (ρ>0.05). The results suggest that digestible organic carbon was sufficiently
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available in the sediments.
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Nona- through hexa-chlorobiphenyls were reduced by 80% in treatment 6 to a final total
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concentration of 0.12 mg kg-1 after 375 days (Figure S2). Since these homolog groups are not
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attacked or poorly attacked by LB400 27, most of the reduction in concentration is attributable to
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reductive dechlorination by DF-1 and possibly by indigenous halorespirers
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homologs accounted for only 22% of the total weathered PCBs in Abrahams Creek sediment,
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bioaugmentation with a halorespirer such as DF-1 would have a critical role in less weathered
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sediment where nona- to hexa-chlorobiphenyls can account for an average 88% of the total
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congener mass in Aroclor 1260 28. Pentachlorobiphenyls 146, 151 and 153, which accounted for
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5.2% of the total mean PCB concentration in the sediment, were degraded by 86, 87 and 89%,
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respectively, in treatment 6. However, these congeners are not dechlorinated by DF-1
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poorly degraded by LB400
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bioamendment with DF-1, a phenomenon that has been reported previously, 10,11,12 indicates that
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indigenous halorespiring or degrading microorganisms were active in the mesocosm, possibly
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stimulated by dechlorination products of DF-1.
27
.
12
. Although these
12
and
The transformation of non-substrate congeners after
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Halorespiring bacteria with different substrate specificities were added to mesocosms 8
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through 10 to test their effectiveness for reducing total PCB concentrations as co-amendments
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with LB400. The extent of degradation with addition of o-17 in treatment 8, which preferentially
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attacks congeners in single flanked ortho substituted and double flanked meta chlorine
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substituted positions, and with DEH10 and SF-1 in treatment 9, which preferentially attack
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congeners in single and double flanked meta chlorine substituted positions, was less than that
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observed with a similar cell concentration of DF-1 in treatment 6. Although DF-1 is limited to
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reduction of doubly flanked chlorines, the dechlorination patterns were similar between the
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amendments.
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chlorobiphenyls contained one or more doubly flanked chlorines
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attacked prior to singly flanked chlorines by both SF1/DEH10 and o-17
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in few observed differences between dechlorination patterns of higher chlorinated congeners by
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DF-1 and the other halorespiring bacteria. Differences in the dehalogenation patterns by the
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different halorespiring strains would also be masked by the relatively rapid degradation rates of
276
aerobic degradation
277
differences would likely have been observed as distinct singly flanked chlorines would have
278
been available and targeted as PCBs were dechlorinated to congeners with six or less chlorines.
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Interestingly, total PCB degradation by the combination of all three halorespiring
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bioamendments appeared to be slightly less than bioaugmentation with only DF-1 and LB400 in
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treatments 5 and 6, although this difference was not significant (ρ>0.05). The results indicate
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that addition of 105 cells g-1 each of DF-1 and LB400 was the most robust treatment for reducing
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total PCB levels. This observation along with the fact that expected dechlorinated intermediates
284
did not accumulate confirm that the total reduction in PCB concentration in the mesocosms was
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the result of anaerobic halorespiration and aerobic degradation occurring concurrently.
One explanation for this observation is that most of the hexa- to nona-
27, 30
, compared with halorespiration
14,10
.
28
, which are preferentially 14,29
. This would result
In the absence of LB400,
286 287
PCB degradation throughout depth profile. The PCB concentrations were not significantly
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different (ρ>0.05) for the upper and lower 3 cm of the sediment column in any of the mesocosms
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(Figure S3). The results indicate that bioaugmentation was effective throughout the 6 cm
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sediment column. PCB degradation by LB400 requires oxygen for dioxygenase mediated ring
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cleavage
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water column, discoloration of the sediment by oxidation was only obvious in the top 0.3-0.5 cm.
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Below the oxidized layer the sediments remained black, likely due to reduced conditions
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maintained by anaerobic decay of native and added organic matter. Benthic activity due to
295
worms was observed throughout the entire sediment depth in treatments 5 and 6 for the first four
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months, which also had the greatest extent of degradation. Based on these results it is not
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possible to draw any conclusion on the role of bioturbation for oxygenation of the lower
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sediment profile. However, the results indicate that even in mesocosms where benthic activity
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was not observed there was sufficient diffusion of oxygen through the porewater to support
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aerobic degradation. The similarity of the homolog patterns between the top and bottom cores
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after 120 days further confirms that both anaerobic dechlorination and aerobic degradation
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occurred throughout the sediment column in treatments 5 to 10.
31
. Although dissolved oxygen levels were maintained at 6.7 mg L-1 throughout the
303 304
Effects of treatments on toxicity of PCBs. Most of the toxic effects of PCBs for humans are
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mediated through the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a cytosolic receptor protein present in
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most vertebrate tissues with high affinity for 2,3,7,8-substituted PCDD/Fs and some coplanar
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PCB congeners
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2,3,4,4’5-pentachlorobiphenyl (PCB 114), 2,3,3’,4,4’,5-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB156) and
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2,3,3’,4,4’,5’-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 157) (Figure 2). The total concentration of these three
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congeners on day 0, 7.40 ng g-1 dw, was reduced 90% to 0.75 ng g-1 dw 375 days after treatment.
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Factoring in the toxic equivalency factor (TEF) for each coplanar congener relative to 2,3,7,8-
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tetra dibenzo-p-dioxin 33, the total toxic equivalency (TEQ) was reduced from 0.22 to 0.02 ρg g-
32
. Three coplanar congeners were detected in Abraham’s Creek sediment:
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1
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estimating relative changes in potential exposure to dioxin-like chemicals from consumption of
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aquatic food products as this approach does not take into account a number of factors such as
316
inhibition of TCDD toxic effects by other congeners in PCB mixtures
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bioaccumulation within the food chain such as partitioning coefficient 35.
. TEQ methodology in human risk assessment in the context of this study is only intended for
34
and factors affecting
318 319
Effect of treatments on PCBs in porewater. Changes in PCB concentrations in porewater
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were measured by passive equilibrium sampling 375 days after treatments Figure 3. There was
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a 30-35% reduction in PCB porewater concentrations after treatment with non-bioamended AC
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in treatments 2 and 3 compared with untreated sediment.
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concentration of PCBs with abiotic AC is less compared with previous reports of >95%
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reduction of porewater PCBs with AC amendments 36. The difference can be largely attributed
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to the low AC dose in the present study (1.5%) compared to much higher doses of AC in
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previous work (>2.5%). The AC dose was kept low in the current study to focus primarily on
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the effect of bioamendment.
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bioamended with 103 (treatment 4), but the difference was not significant (ρ> 0.05) from the
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abiotic AC treatments 2 and 3. All of the remaining bioamended treatments showed a significant
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reduction of PCBs in the porewater compared with untreated sediment (ρ< 0.05) ranging from
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94% in treatment 10 to the greatest reduction, 97%, in treatment 6. Thus, the overall reductions
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in the freely dissolved porewater concentrations were larger than the corresponding reductions in
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the total PCBs in sediments indicating that the more soluble dechlorination products were not
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accumulating, but were further degraded by the aerobes. Presence of 1.5% AC was also
The reductions in porewater
Porewater PCB was reduced 40% after treatment with AC
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contributing to some of the reductions in porewater concentration beyond mass reduction by
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degradation.
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PCBs were not detected in the XAD resin indicating the reduction in PCB levels was not
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attributable to abiotic loss in the water column. Coplanar PCB congeners levels in the overlying
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water phase were below the detection limit of 0.01 ng L-1 in all of the mesocosms, including the
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untreated mesocosm. The results indicate that the addition of bioamendment was effective at
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reducing freely dissolved PCBs levels in sediment porewater, thereby reducing the potential for
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PCB flux into the overlying water and bioaccumulation in the aquatic food web including fish.
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Sustainability of the bioamendment. DF-1 and LB400 in treatment 6 were detected throughout
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the experiment, but their titer decreased approximately 2-3 orders of magnitude after 375 days
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(Figure 4), whereas the number of DF-1 and LB400 gene copies g-1 in treatments in non-
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bioaugmented treatments was below the theoretical detection limit of 102 gene copies g-1
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sediment. During the first sixty days when the cell titer was highest, there was a decrease in
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PCBs, but no significant increase in intermediate dechlorination products. Some dechlorination
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products were observed to accumulate on days 120 and 375, which coincides with two orders of
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magnitude decrease in the titer of LB400 (Figure S4). Overall, the results suggest that the
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aerobic degradation rate by LB400 was greater than the halorespiration rate of DF-1 in the first
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two months, but as the titer of LB400 decreased the net rate of degradation no longer exceeded
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that of anaerobic dechlorination, resulting in accumulation of some dechlorinated congeners.
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This observation is not surprising as degradation of halogenated biphenyls is co-metabolic and
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will not support growth 16. The titer of DF-1 also decreased over the course of 375 days, but at a
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slower rate than LB400. Although halorespiration of PCBs supports growth,14, 12 Lombard et al.
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relevant soluble PCB concentrations is too low to maintain a large population of bacteria. In the
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present study this limitation was overcome by introducing a high cell titer sufficient to reduce the
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bioavailable portion of PCBs without growth.
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calculated that the thermodynamic cell yield of halorespiring bacteria at environmentally
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In a prior study, activity in Baltimore Harbor sediment mesocosms bioaugmented with
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DF-1 and LB400 degradation was not detected after 80% of total PCBs were removed, although
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the remaining congeners were potential substrates for PCB dehalogenation or degradation. The
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report suggested that activity stopped because PCBs were no longer bioavailable and/or oxygen
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became limiting in the static mesocosms. However, in this study the dissolved oxygen in the
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water column was maintained at above 6% throughout the 375 days incubation period and there
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were no significant difference in the degradation patterns in the sediment column, which
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suggests that oxygen was likely not the limiting factor. Another possibility for the observed limit
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of degradation at 78% of the original PCB concentration in treatment 6 was the reduction in cell
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titer over time. However, repeating the treatment of mesocosm 6 after 375 days (105 cells g-1
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each of DF-1 and LB400 applied with AC and 0.03% cellulose) did not stimulate further
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degradation of total PCBs after 79 days, which indicates that the decline in activity was not due
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to a decrease in the titer of an active PCB degrading population or TOC. This observation
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combined with the low concentration of soluble PCBs (97% reduction) suggests that activity was
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inhibited by low bioavailability of the remaining PCBs. The total PCBs remaining are likely
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tightly bound to the AC and organic fraction in the sediment, and are below the threshold for
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uptake by the bioamendments.
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Effect of treatments on the indigenous microbial population. Overall, the microbial diversity
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significantly decreased over the course of the experiment (paired t-test, ρ