Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica

Several fuel spills have occurred near Australias Antarctic stations, associated with the use of SAB diesel for power generation. This has resulted in significant petroleum hydrocarbon contamination in soils. Successful remediation of fuel spills requires knowledge of the impact of hydrocarbons on t...

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Main Authors: Richardson, L, Powell, S, King, C
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: SSAC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ecite.utas.edu.au/84412
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivtasecite:oai:ecite.utas.edu.au:84412 2023-05-15T14:02:31+02:00 Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica Richardson, L Powell, S King, C 2013 http://ecite.utas.edu.au/84412 en eng SSAC Richardson, L and Powell, S and King, C, Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica, Strategic Science in Antarctica Conference 2013, 24-26 June 2013, Hobart, Tasmania (2013) [Conference Extract] http://ecite.utas.edu.au/84412 Environmental Sciences Ecological Applications Ecosystem Function Conference Extract NonPeerReviewed 2013 ftunivtasecite 2019-12-13T21:48:52Z Several fuel spills have occurred near Australias Antarctic stations, associated with the use of SAB diesel for power generation. This has resulted in significant petroleum hydrocarbon contamination in soils. Successful remediation of fuel spills requires knowledge of the impact of hydrocarbons on the soil ecosystem. Microorganisms play an integral role the normal functioning of soils, and are useful indicators of soil health. In this study, microorganisms were used to assess the toxicity of hydrocarbons in Antarctic soils. qPCR was used to measure the numbers of microbial genes responsible for a range of soil processes (alkane monooxygenase, catechol 2 3-dioxygenase, nitrous oxide reductase and nitrogenase reductase) in response to both fresh and aged fuel contamination. Soil was freshly spiked with a range of concentrations of SAB. A clear dose-response relationship between hydrocarbon concentration and the numbers of total microorganisms, alkane degraders and denitrifiers (measured by the rpoB, alkB and nosZ genes respectively) was observed. Additionally, alkane degraders dominated the community in soils containing higher concentrations of hydrocarbons. Soils collected at a contaminated site at Casey Station currently undergoing in-situ remediation were diluted with clean soils to create a natural aged contamination gradient. A similar trend in gene numbers was observed in these soils, although this relationship was less clear. Data obtained in this study will be used to advise remediation activities and to monitor in-situ progress, and will be incorporated into the development of targets that define trigger-points and set end points for remediation. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania) Antarctic Casey Station ENVELOPE(110.528,110.528,-66.282,-66.282)
institution Open Polar
collection eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania)
op_collection_id ftunivtasecite
language English
topic Environmental Sciences
Ecological Applications
Ecosystem Function
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences
Ecological Applications
Ecosystem Function
Richardson, L
Powell, S
King, C
Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
topic_facet Environmental Sciences
Ecological Applications
Ecosystem Function
description Several fuel spills have occurred near Australias Antarctic stations, associated with the use of SAB diesel for power generation. This has resulted in significant petroleum hydrocarbon contamination in soils. Successful remediation of fuel spills requires knowledge of the impact of hydrocarbons on the soil ecosystem. Microorganisms play an integral role the normal functioning of soils, and are useful indicators of soil health. In this study, microorganisms were used to assess the toxicity of hydrocarbons in Antarctic soils. qPCR was used to measure the numbers of microbial genes responsible for a range of soil processes (alkane monooxygenase, catechol 2 3-dioxygenase, nitrous oxide reductase and nitrogenase reductase) in response to both fresh and aged fuel contamination. Soil was freshly spiked with a range of concentrations of SAB. A clear dose-response relationship between hydrocarbon concentration and the numbers of total microorganisms, alkane degraders and denitrifiers (measured by the rpoB, alkB and nosZ genes respectively) was observed. Additionally, alkane degraders dominated the community in soils containing higher concentrations of hydrocarbons. Soils collected at a contaminated site at Casey Station currently undergoing in-situ remediation were diluted with clean soils to create a natural aged contamination gradient. A similar trend in gene numbers was observed in these soils, although this relationship was less clear. Data obtained in this study will be used to advise remediation activities and to monitor in-situ progress, and will be incorporated into the development of targets that define trigger-points and set end points for remediation.
format Conference Object
author Richardson, L
Powell, S
King, C
author_facet Richardson, L
Powell, S
King, C
author_sort Richardson, L
title Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
title_short Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
title_full Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
title_fullStr Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica
title_sort microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in antarctica
publisher SSAC
publishDate 2013
url http://ecite.utas.edu.au/84412
long_lat ENVELOPE(110.528,110.528,-66.282,-66.282)
geographic Antarctic
Casey Station
geographic_facet Antarctic
Casey Station
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation Richardson, L and Powell, S and King, C, Microbial functional genes can be used as indicators of soil health in response to fuel spills in Antarctica, Strategic Science in Antarctica Conference 2013, 24-26 June 2013, Hobart, Tasmania (2013) [Conference Extract]
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/84412
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