Microbial communities in seawater from an Arctic and a temperate Norwegian fjord and their potentials for biodegradation of chemically dispersed oil at low seawater temperatures

Ribicic D, Netzer R, Winkler A, Brakstad OG. Microbial communities in seawater from an Arctic and a temperate Norwegian fjord and their potentials for biodegradation of chemically dispersed oil at low seawater temperatures. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN . 2018;129(1):308-317. Biodegradation of chemicall...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Pollution Bulletin
Main Authors: Ribicic, Deni, Netzer, Roman, Winkler, Anika, Brakstad, Odd Gunnar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd 2018
Subjects:
Oil
Online Access:https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2920701
Description
Summary:Ribicic D, Netzer R, Winkler A, Brakstad OG. Microbial communities in seawater from an Arctic and a temperate Norwegian fjord and their potentials for biodegradation of chemically dispersed oil at low seawater temperatures. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN . 2018;129(1):308-317. Biodegradation of chemically dispersed oil at low temperature (0-2 degrees C) was compared in natural seawater from Arctic (Svalbard) and a temperate (Norway) fjords. The oil was premixed with a dispersant (Corexit 9500) and small-droplet oil dispersions prepared. Faster biotransformation of n-alkanes in the Arctic than in the temperate seawater were associated with the initially higher abundance of the alkane-degrading genus Oleispira in the Arctic than the temperate seawater. Comparable transformation of aromatic hydrocarbons was further associated with the late emergences Cycloclasticus in both seawater sources. The results showed that chemically dispersed oil may be rapidly biodegraded by microbial communities in Arctic seawater. Compared to oil biodegradation studies at higher seawater temperatures, longer lag-periods were experienced here, and may be attributed to both microbial and oil properties at these low seawater temperatures.