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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Nov 1996, 4174-4179, Vol 62, No. 11
Q Wu, DL Bedard and J Wiegel
We studied the impact of incubation temperatures on the dechlorination of
2,3,4,6-tetrachlorobiphenyl (2346-CB) in two sediments from different
climates: polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-free sediment from Sandy Creek
Nature Center Pond (SCNC) in Athens, Ga., and PCB-contaminated sediment
from Woods Pond (WP) in Lenox, Mass. Sediment slurries were incubated
anaerobically with 350 (mu)M 2346-CB for 1 year at temperatures ranging
from 4 to 66(deg)C. Most of the 2346-CB was dechlorinated between 12 and
34(deg)C in both sediments and, unexpectedly, between 50 and 60(deg)C in WP
sediment. This is the first report of PCB dechlorination at thermobiotic
temperatures. The data reveal profound differences in dechlorination rate,
extent, and products as a function of sediment and temperature. The highest
observed rate of dechlorination of 2346-CB to trichlorobiphenyls occurred
at 30(deg)C in both sediments, but the rate was higher for WP than for SCNC
sediment (46 versus 16 (mu)mol liter(sup-1) day(sup-1)). For SCNC sediment
the rate of dechlorination dropped sharply below 30(deg)C, but for WP
sediments it was near optimal from 20 to 34(deg)C and then dropped sharply
below 20(deg)C. In WP sediment most of the meta chlorines were removed
between 8 and 34(deg)C and between 50 and 60(deg)C. para dechlorination was
restricted from 18 to 34(deg)C and was optimal at 20(deg)C. ortho
dechlorination occurred between 8 and 30(deg)C, with optima around 15 and
27(deg)C, but the extent was highly variable. In SCNC sediment complete
meta dechlorination occurred from 12 to 34(deg)C and para dechlorination
occurred from 18 to 30(deg)C; both were optimal at 30(deg)C. No ortho
dechlorination was observed. Dechlorination products were 246-CB, 236-CB,
and 26-CB (both sediments) and 24-CB, 2-CB, and 4-CB (WP sediment). The
data suggest that in SCNC sediment similar factors controlled meta and para
PCB dechlorination over a broad temperature range (18 to 30(deg)C) but that
in WP sediment there were multiple temperature-dependent changes in the
factors controlling ortho, meta, and para dechlorination. We attribute the
differences observed in the two sediments to differences in their
PCB-dechlorinating communities.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Influence of Incubation Temperature on the Microbial Reductive Dechlorination of 2,3,4,6-Tetrachlorobiphenyl in Two Freshwater Sediments
Department of Microbiology and Center for Biological Resource Recovery, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, and Environmental Laboratory, GE Corporate Research and Development, Schenectady, New York 12301
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